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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel a bit hurt about childcare differences between grandchildren?

467 replies

OneLovingMoose · 01/04/2026 21:41

Ive just had a baby and we’ve already had to confirm nursery. I’ve arranged 4 days a week when I go back (using a mix of annual leave and flexible working for the first 10 months, then we’ll reassess). My husband does contract work so can’t commit a day but will do pick ups/drops off around his contracts. I am very much of the opinion that it’s our responsibility to arrange childcare and whilst I would accept help I am not going to expect this or put this onto others - it’s theirs to offer as it’s a lot!

Here’s where I’m struggling a bit…

My sister had a baby 2 years ago and my mum looks after my nephew 2 days a week, with nursery the other 3. This was an arrangement she offered when my sister went back to work 2 days a week after Easter. As she’s a teacher this meant she didn’t have to arrange nursery until September. My sister then went back 5 days a week from the September and my mum continued to look after my nephew 2 days with him in nursery the other 3.

My mum has very strong views that nursery isn’t right for young children and has always blamed any illness or toddler behaviour on it 🙄. Both my sister and I have pushed back on this (especially when she suggests my sister should stop working), but those views have remained based on nothing but her opinion. When I say to her I think my nephew has a good balance of 2 days with her and 3 in nursery (8.15-4pm) she snaps that’s he’s too young to be in 3 full days Q (he’s 2 next month).

What’s confusing/hurtful is that there’s been no mention of a similar arrangement for my baby. I haven’t asked outright, and she hasn’t offered. What’s hurting me most is the acknowledgement- if my mum can’t offer the same to my baby as she’s committed to my nephews arrangement and can’t see herself doing more, fine, but an acknowledgment of this would go a long way. It also feels like double standards that she rants about the negatives of nursery for my nephew but there has been no mention of this for my baby.

The thing is, my mum is brilliant with my nephew and clearly loves it, but it does tire her out. She often seems irritable afterwards and has been ill more, but won’t acknowledge it’s a lot and insists she wants to do it and takes it personally when I mention how it’s a lot for her especially when I make a joke of a bad mood she may be in after a tough couple of toddler tantrum days.

My sister and her husband accept the help (understandably as it saves them a lot), but also put up with the moods and comments. I am also hurt that they haven’t mentioned the disparity either to me or I don’t think my mum.

My husband says my mum and sister are similar and live more in the moment so may not have even occurred to them that even though it’s a year away arrangements have to be made now and they aren’t thinking about it. I see that but don’t accept this as surely it’s pretty obvious, when I was pregnant but now the baby is here.

I’m reluctant to ask my mum directly because I don’t want any sense of obligation or guilt for either of us. I also see how tiring it is for her and couldn’t bear the guilt knowing it was my baby doing this and it hadn’t just been her choice. But equally I wonder if she assumes I don’t need help because I’m seen as the “capable” one and then I’ve been clear I value nursery for socialisation and that I do want to go back to work.

I think what’s bothering me most is the inconsistency. She was so adamant about nursery negatives with my nephew, yet hasn’t said anything similar to me about my child. And longer term, it feels a bit unfair that my child may be in nursery 4 days a week while my nephew (if this continues) only does 3 who will be 2 years older, plus there’s a significant financial difference for us vs my sister.

I fully appreciate no one owes me childcare, and we’ve made plans we can afford — but I can’t shake the feeling of it being a bit unequal.

AIBU to feel hurt by this, or am I overthinking it?

OP posts:
HazelMember · 04/04/2026 10:18

JassyRadlett · 04/04/2026 07:27

OK, I think I've found it in the OP - where OP
says she mentions to her mum that "it's a lot for her" and that she often seems irritable after the childcare (not the comment).

Which rather puts the PP's statements closer to creative writing rather than inference, if that paragraph is what it's based on.

OP's own words:

my mum is brilliant with my nephew and clearly loves it, but it does tire her out. She often seems irritable afterwards and has been ill more.

Yet OP focuses on why the offer for childcare for her has not been made. Maybe because OP's mum doesn't want yet more tiredness and illness?

january1244 · 04/04/2026 10:56

This is a tough one. Personally I hope I would equalise support between my children. However my mum has my sister’s children five days a week and doesn’t have mine at all. I wouldn’t expect her to, it’s her retirement. But it’s a shame she has never thought about spending time with mine. The financial disparity is insane also, we are spending £60k a year on nursery. My sisters children have never been in any paid childcare, not even afterschool clubs.

It’s possible she wants to continue her two days with your sister, and doesn’t want to commit to more

WhiteJasmin · 04/04/2026 11:11

january1244 · 04/04/2026 10:56

This is a tough one. Personally I hope I would equalise support between my children. However my mum has my sister’s children five days a week and doesn’t have mine at all. I wouldn’t expect her to, it’s her retirement. But it’s a shame she has never thought about spending time with mine. The financial disparity is insane also, we are spending £60k a year on nursery. My sisters children have never been in any paid childcare, not even afterschool clubs.

It’s possible she wants to continue her two days with your sister, and doesn’t want to commit to more

I agree.

I proactively tell my parents do not offer me something that you can't offer equally to my other siblings. If I am benefiting from free care for my kids, and my parents are too tired to extend to my sibling for help, then I would offer to put my kids in the nursery and so my siblings can have the care since I've already benefited before their kids came.

january1244 · 04/04/2026 11:28

@WhiteJasminI feel the same way. But my mum and sister are both happy with the arrangement. I did ask my mum about it over some wine once, but she just said she wouldn’t be changing her existing arrangement with my sister and that was that.

JassyRadlett · 04/04/2026 12:47

HazelMember · 04/04/2026 10:18

OP's own words:

my mum is brilliant with my nephew and clearly loves it, but it does tire her out. She often seems irritable afterwards and has been ill more.

Yet OP focuses on why the offer for childcare for her has not been made. Maybe because OP's mum doesn't want yet more tiredness and illness?

Yes, this is what OP has noticed, not what's she's repeatedly "criticised" her mother for. I can't find anything she says she's actually said to her mother beyond acknowledging that it's a lot, and making an occasional joke.

She also acknowledges that her mother shouldn't do more, and that in some ways it's probably better that she doesn't provide childcare to OP's child - but is hurt that her mother hasn't raised the issue one way or the other.

I get this doesn't fit the preferred simple narrative, so posters have had to use a fair bit of creative license to make OP a "grasping bludger" rather than new mum who's hurt that even if it's not possible, her mother hasn't acknowledged the situation, especially after all the things her mother's said about nurseries.

notenoughalonetime · 04/04/2026 12:49

JassyRadlett · 04/04/2026 12:47

Yes, this is what OP has noticed, not what's she's repeatedly "criticised" her mother for. I can't find anything she says she's actually said to her mother beyond acknowledging that it's a lot, and making an occasional joke.

She also acknowledges that her mother shouldn't do more, and that in some ways it's probably better that she doesn't provide childcare to OP's child - but is hurt that her mother hasn't raised the issue one way or the other.

I get this doesn't fit the preferred simple narrative, so posters have had to use a fair bit of creative license to make OP a "grasping bludger" rather than new mum who's hurt that even if it's not possible, her mother hasn't acknowledged the situation, especially after all the things her mother's said about nurseries.

We don't know how her comments and 'jokes' have landed with her mother either though. Maybe it's put her off offering to care for her child? In any case, OP isn't at the same stage as her sister was when her mother offered care, so she doesn't have a clue if an offer is planned for a similar stage.

JassyRadlett · 04/04/2026 12:55

notenoughalonetime · 04/04/2026 12:49

We don't know how her comments and 'jokes' have landed with her mother either though. Maybe it's put her off offering to care for her child? In any case, OP isn't at the same stage as her sister was when her mother offered care, so she doesn't have a clue if an offer is planned for a similar stage.

Maybe. We don't know. That's rather my point - that the characterisation of the OP's remarks has taken inference to some quite interesting extremes.

WhiteJasmin · 04/04/2026 18:35

january1244 · 04/04/2026 11:28

@WhiteJasminI feel the same way. But my mum and sister are both happy with the arrangement. I did ask my mum about it over some wine once, but she just said she wouldn’t be changing her existing arrangement with my sister and that was that.

So sorry to hear. That's not fair. It sounds like your sister may be the golden child. I'm dealing with this on my in law's side. What I took away from this is what not to do when I'm a grandparent and I've also scaled back on my help to match my in law's energy with my kids.

Allonthesametrain · 04/04/2026 18:47

Could it just be (sounds crude I know) first come first served? She's already looking after one GC which you say is tiring for her so for her to look after another one would mean 2 at the same time or 4 days a week.

Maybe she's not even thought about it?

Perhaps too soon to think about it?

thepariscrimefiles · 04/04/2026 18:57

january1244 · 04/04/2026 11:28

@WhiteJasminI feel the same way. But my mum and sister are both happy with the arrangement. I did ask my mum about it over some wine once, but she just said she wouldn’t be changing her existing arrangement with my sister and that was that.

I'm amazed that you are so understanding and accepting of the clear favouritism from your mum towards your sister and her children.

Obviously your sister would be happy with the arrangement as she has free childcare on tap and doesn't have to pay a penny. I presume that she also doesn't have to worry if the children are ill as your mum will still look after them.

I'd be massively pissed off in your shoes.

january1244 · 04/04/2026 19:33

I’m not really @thepariscrimefilesbut the problem is I have expressed how I feel, we argued, she didn’t budge, it’s that or lose my mum and sister. I don’t actually want the childcare anyway, I think easier in some ways to pay for it. I would just love her to make some effort with my children, pick them up early a couple of times a month, take them back for tea etc. The nursery is five mins from her house. But she can’t realistically manage four young children so that doesn’t happen ever.

And yes @WhiteJasmin we have tips for how not to be with our children for sure. Sorry you have that too on the in-laws side

HazelMember · 04/04/2026 21:32

Grandfathers have it so much easier!

WhiteJasmin · 04/04/2026 21:58

@january1244

I'm coming to terms with it. I'm too mostly sad that my kids won't get quality time with my in law's side. I know from my own experience what it is like to have a grandparent who plays favouritism with my cousin. So much so when she passed, none of the grandchildren (i.e. my siblings and all our other cousins) just felt nothing. There's just no bonding and connection. I pushed for change knowing it might happen to my kids but it is what it is.

I think this isn't just about childcare, along with the OP. It's about not spending quality time to get to know and bond with all grandkids equally.

notenoughalonetime · 04/04/2026 22:14

WhiteJasmin · 04/04/2026 21:58

@january1244

I'm coming to terms with it. I'm too mostly sad that my kids won't get quality time with my in law's side. I know from my own experience what it is like to have a grandparent who plays favouritism with my cousin. So much so when she passed, none of the grandchildren (i.e. my siblings and all our other cousins) just felt nothing. There's just no bonding and connection. I pushed for change knowing it might happen to my kids but it is what it is.

I think this isn't just about childcare, along with the OP. It's about not spending quality time to get to know and bond with all grandkids equally.

That's not always possible or realistic though. My mother has sometimes complained about unequal treatment between my cousins and myself/sibling. They got given computers, money, other things. We got a card in the mail on birthdays. I just think when she talks about it, "Well, you decided to move us to another country where we have no relationship with our grandparents and never seen them, unlike the cousins who live close and see them all the time, so it's perfectly natural that they have that kind of relationship and we don't." I don't feel hard done by. If my mother wanted equality, then maybe she shouldn't have put so much distance between us all. Sometimes it's the choices made by the parents that make the difference.

WhiteJasmin · 05/04/2026 01:29

notenoughalonetime · 04/04/2026 22:14

That's not always possible or realistic though. My mother has sometimes complained about unequal treatment between my cousins and myself/sibling. They got given computers, money, other things. We got a card in the mail on birthdays. I just think when she talks about it, "Well, you decided to move us to another country where we have no relationship with our grandparents and never seen them, unlike the cousins who live close and see them all the time, so it's perfectly natural that they have that kind of relationship and we don't." I don't feel hard done by. If my mother wanted equality, then maybe she shouldn't have put so much distance between us all. Sometimes it's the choices made by the parents that make the difference.

I agree 100% equality is not possible all the time, especially in terms of some grandparents live closer so naturally gets to spend more time. No grudges there.

In my case, I mean it's pretty telling if absolutely none of the grandkids (other than the one that's her favourite possibly) cared enough about her passing that is saying something. It's not distance. It's about not spending effort to have quality time and care. It doesn't mean you have to spend equal amount of time with the grandkids but you need to make effort to spend some 1:1 time ad hoc and when you do spend the time with each of them be totally present. Not talking about the other grandkids you spend more time with.

Needlenardlenoo · 05/04/2026 08:53

HazelMember · 04/04/2026 21:32

Grandfathers have it so much easier!

Don't they!

Did anyone see the Sort Your Life Out really where they put the late granddad's voice notes onto a rotary dial phone?

luluw41 · 05/04/2026 09:45

Have you told her you’ve booked baby in? If so, what did she say about the number of days? It’s a shame you’ve already done it as you could’ve asked her to come along and view it.
I feel sure it hasn’t occurred to her yet. If I’m wrong could you ask if it would be too much for her to have both children for maybe one day to lessen the time at nursery.

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