Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To stop asking MIL to babysit, when we don’t need it?

201 replies

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:22

My MIL very much wants to be the involved grandma who is asked to babysit our children (6 and 2) and DH is very keen for his mum to feel included and important as a grandmother, so we ask her to babysit. The problem is that whenever we actually do ask her, she doesn’t really do what we ask. It’s never anything catastrophic, but it’s consistently frustrating. She’ll keep our eldest up far too late because she doesn’t want to properly enforce bedtime, so we then get back an overtired, emotional child. She’ll let our toddler skip naps or completely ignore routines because she thinks “one day won’t hurt,” when of course it absolutely does when we’re then left dealing with the fallout. She also has a habit of giving treats, screen time, or freedoms we’ve specifically said no to, and generally treats our parenting preferences more like optional suggestions than actual instructions.

So instead of childcare genuinely helping us, it often creates more stress afterwards. Before anyone says “well, let DH deal with the aftermath then,” yes, he often does. But that doesn’t magically solve the issue. I’m still in the same house listening to overtired children screaming, struggling, and melting down, and I’m hardly going to sit there with my feet up while my kids are miserable just to prove a point. Their difficult evening still affects the whole household, regardless of whose “turn” it is to manage it.

The key point is that we are not remotely short on childcare. My side of the family help and actually respect our routines and boundaries (DH agrees that this is the case), and if needed we also have paid childcare options who, unsurprisingly, do exactly what we ask. So this isn’t about necessity at all. It’s much more that DH feels guilty because his mum clearly wants to feel needed, involved, and chosen, and he worries that not asking her more often will hurt her feelings. On Sunday we went out because apparently MIL was sad that she hadn’t been asked to babysit in a while, whereas my mum had been a lot recently. To me it felt almost like she hadn’t had her turn to play with the toys and is in a mood about it - they’re actual living humans!

Childcare isn’t a charitable role you hand out to preserve a grown adult’s sense of importance. She absolutely loves the children, and I’m not trying to cut her out or stop her seeing them, but I am increasingly struggling with the idea that we should knowingly make our own lives harder, and our children’s evenings harder, just to protect her feelings. Seeing them with us present apparently isn’t the same thing to her. AIBU to think that “wanting to feel included” isn’t enough reason to keep using someone for babysitting when they repeatedly ignore how you want your children cared for? And how do others navigate this without it becoming huge family drama, especially when your husband seems more focused on not upsetting his mother than on whether the childcare is actually helpful?

OP posts:
Octavia64 · 13/05/2026 13:24

one way around this may be to try to make her feel more included.

this could be day trips out that she joins you on etc.

that way she’s not got sole care.

BiddlyBipBipBeeBop · 13/05/2026 13:25

Have you ever explained to her that when she doesn’t stick to your routine and boundaries, it causes difficulties? That your other childcare options don’t do that? That this makes you prefer to use other options?

CurlewKate · 13/05/2026 13:27

No-her feelings don't matter at all-why would she want to see her grandchildren? You just keep prioritising your mother. The occasional late night for a 6 year old is completely unacceptable…..

AnotherNameChange1234567 · 13/05/2026 13:28

Go out for lunches with your husband and let her look after them during the day until they are older. That way your evenings won’t go to shit.

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:29

@Octavia64we frequently invite her on days out and she says it’s not the same. She complains that she feels like a “visiting grandma rather than family”. Sole care is the only thing that seems to be that’ll make her feel “like a grandma”…
And DH is v concerned about giving this to her as our kids are her only grandchildren

OP posts:
HouseOfGoldandBones · 13/05/2026 13:31

You need to ask her every time. Did the children go to bed at the time we asked? No? Why not? Did toddler nap as usual? No? Why not?
Then when she gives you the excuse, you remind her of the routine & ask why she's not following it & remind her why your routine needs to be followed.
If she continues not to follow it (or worse lies) you just have to be honest. I'm sorry, because you didn't follow our routine, it has caused us problems, so we won't ask you again.

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:31

@BiddlyBipBipBeeBopwe have and she’ll just sort of say something along the lines of “grandma gets to make decisions in the moment - hes having fun so I delayed bedtime, he ate ‘well’ so I gave him a huge slice of cake, I made the cake specifically for him so why couldn’t he have a large bit as otherwise it wouldn’t get eaten”

OP posts:
Sunisgettinganewhaton · 13/05/2026 13:31

Maybe get her a doll for Christmas?
You are appeasing a grown woman to the detriment of your dc's wellbeing..
That's not on right?
Sorry mil but the dc were a nightmare after you did xyz last time. You are welcome to come for lunch on x day though. Granny doesn't need unsupervised access to be a decent granny.

Notmycircusnotmyotter · 13/05/2026 13:32

This would drive me nuts. YANBU at all.

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:33

@AnotherNameChange1234567 then naps are skipped and they’ve watched way too much TV, they’ll be high on sugar. It just feels like I could have (and would have wanted to!) done something productive in that time, let them run around outdoors, taken them to a zoo, done a craft etc but instead they’ve been plopped in front of the TV, fed sweets and skipped naps.

OP posts:
wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:35

@HouseOfGoldandBones she’s very open about the fact that routines aren’t followed.
“he didn’t look tired so I didn’t put him to sleep”
”we were having fun watching SpongeBob so I thought that’d be better use of time than sleep”
“I made a cake for them and if they didn’t eat it, it would just go in the bin, so I gave them a large slice each”

OP posts:
TomatoSandwiches · 13/05/2026 13:35

She doesn't need them by herself for seeing them to count, she's being manipulative and I don't know about you but I don't reward that kind of behaviour, I take a BIG step back.
Next time she asks why she hasn't had the children tell her exactly why, tell her your other options actually listen and respect you as parents and the children come back regulated and happy.

EmeraldShamrock000 · 13/05/2026 13:37

She is a monster. Go low contact.
In RL you are luckily in a position where she is surplus to requirements, forgetting that she is a loving DGM, part of your children.
If you didn’t have the extra family support from your side you’d probably be less likely to moan.

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:37

@TomatoSandwiches
i think this is the way forward tbh as much as my DH will hate it

OP posts:
moose62 · 13/05/2026 13:37

I would be honest with her - she is an adult. I would say that unless she sticks to your rules, you will not ask her to look after the children. One or the other. You can't trust her and she obviously doesn't understand or care about the problems she is causing.

Timeforabiscuit · 13/05/2026 13:37

Ask her - are you doing this for you, or are you doing it for them? Because right now I'm looking at two really overtired kids when I left you two happy ones, what the hell are you playing at?

Be blunt and direct - it won't land with her otherwise - and this needs to come straight from DH.

AnotherNameChange1234567 · 13/05/2026 13:37

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:33

@AnotherNameChange1234567 then naps are skipped and they’ve watched way too much TV, they’ll be high on sugar. It just feels like I could have (and would have wanted to!) done something productive in that time, let them run around outdoors, taken them to a zoo, done a craft etc but instead they’ve been plopped in front of the TV, fed sweets and skipped naps.

Would she not take them to the park or zoo etc for a couple of hours then?

FasterMichelin · 13/05/2026 13:38

I can see why it’s annoying.

But if this is a monthly thing, then it’s not worth the upset, I’d just let it happen. Short term, you suffer, long term, your child has lovely memories of late nights and cake with grandma. Memories that will last a lifetime.

It’s not a huge deal and as your kids get older, the odd late night or slice of cake or screen time affects them much less. Mine are 5 and 8 now and they’re able to take the odd late night without it impacting next day.

Usernameisunavailable · 13/05/2026 13:39

She needs to fully understand the reasons why you’re pulling back and if she’s still actively choosing to ignore your instructions, the consequences are she doesn’t get to babysit, end of story. You could maybe get her to babysit in the daytime for short stints, eg. when you’re doing boring stuff like supermarket shopping, if she’s near enough to make that work?

CurbsideProphet · 13/05/2026 13:39

"Seeing them with us present apparently isn’t the same thing to her."

This really stands out to me. My parents and MIL mostly see DC with me / DH / both of us. They do emergency childcare for us on occasion during the day, but usually at our house while I'm working upstairs.

I would feel sad if my parents didn't want to see me.

It can be hard work looking after small children and it seems like she resorts to TV and snacks to get them to sit still, and doesn't want to deal with real not fun aspects of looking after children ie saying no when necessary or bedtime.

SuburbanKel · 13/05/2026 13:39

She needs to respect your boundaries 100% - for that I am totally on your side. As someone who is clearly entirely surplus to any requirements to my ' DiL' in the lives of my Grandsons, I do empathise with the woman wanting to feel involved fully in their lives.

LiviaDrusillaAugusta · 13/05/2026 13:41

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:33

@AnotherNameChange1234567 then naps are skipped and they’ve watched way too much TV, they’ll be high on sugar. It just feels like I could have (and would have wanted to!) done something productive in that time, let them run around outdoors, taken them to a zoo, done a craft etc but instead they’ve been plopped in front of the TV, fed sweets and skipped naps.

Isn’t the whole ‘sugar high’ something that has been debunked?

EmeraldShamrock000 · 13/05/2026 13:41

How often is she babysitting?

wndqstn · 13/05/2026 13:42

@AnotherNameChange1234567 she can take them to her garden for a quick run around but says 2 is difficult to manage in an open space / out and about, but also that the little one is difficult as he doesn’t like to stay in the pram for long but also won’t walk fast at a zoo, the 6yo is high energy as 6yos are… or that it’s just “nicer” at granny’s house (I think it’s laziness tbh)

OP posts:
SunSparkle · 13/05/2026 13:43

I once sent my MIL (via her son obviously) a video of the fallout of a day of too much sugar and no naps and the hysterical bedtime it caused. I said if she wants to do grandmas rules she has to have them overnight.

she does have them overnight now and surprise surprise she’s a bit better with restricting sugar and enforcing naps and bedtime as she’s the one that gets the fall out of it .

Swipe left for the next trending thread