Her MIL Barely Knows Her Grandson But Suddenly Wants To Stay With Them When The New Baby Arrives, And The Husband’s Response Was Perfect

Some grandparents earn their place in their grandkids’ lives through consistent effort, love, and showing up. Others expect the title and the access without ever doing the work. One mother-in-law falls firmly into the second category.

She lives four hours away now, but even when she was only 40 minutes away she made almost no effort to see her 2.5-year-old grandson.

Yet when she heard her daughter-in-law is pregnant with a little girl, she suddenly decided she should come stay with the family to watch the toddler while mom is in the hospital.

Her MIL Barely Knows Her Grandson But Suddenly Wants to Stay With Them When the New Baby Arrives, and the Husband's Response Was Perfect
Not the actual photo

The couple already had a solid plan in place, and the husband’s blunt reaction said everything.

'My MIL apparently wants to stay with us when the new baby gets here?'

I posted in here before about my MIL’s utter devastation at the fact that her 2.5 yo grandson doesn’t know her

(aka she has made zero effort to spend time with him) and demanded weekly FT calls after he ignored her at his birthday party in favor of her ex husband.

The boy loves his papa lol. This is the woman who drives 12 hours one way down to see her daughter

and granddaughters multiple times a year but couldn’t bother to see us once when we lived 40 minutes away.

She’s planned two trips since we moved and canceled both. And does anyone care to take a guess at how many of those oh-so-necessary calls have actually taken place since...

Two. And one of those was to tell her that I’m pregnant with a little girl.

Since then we’ve had exactly one regular phone call where she told me that we needed to let her know ahead of time when the baby was coming (girl do...

so that she could come down and watch our son while we are at the hospital. Apparently she thinks it’s easier than my parents flying in.

My parents, who see my son more in a year than she has in his entire life even though she lived 40 minutes from us until last year and they...

To be clear, we already have a care plan for my son. My parents will fly in two days before my due date, my best friend (who lives in the...

is on standby to drive up if they don’t arrive in time, and we have a babysitter lined up to keep him if necessary until she arrives.

I explained this to MIL and said we appreciated it but we have it covered.

She put on her ultra-hurt woe-is-me act immediately about how she feels like he doesn’t know her and I was basically like… he doesn’t lol.

My best friend who will come help literally lived with us for 8 months last year and he completely trusts her.

I’m not leaving him with a stranger. She got huffy and said she understood then hung up.

The funny part is that she called me instead of her son because she knows I’ll at least be diplomatic about it.

I told him after the call that she wanted us to plan on her watching our son and his response was “why?

So we can scramble to find a replacement after she flakes last minute?” Lmao in all honesty the chances of her never meeting this child at all are very high.

The woman, let’s call her Emily, has posted before about this MIL’s behavior. The older woman was devastated that her grandson barely knows her, mainly because she has put in zero consistent effort.

She drives 12 hours one way multiple times a year to see her daughter and granddaughters, but could not manage even one visit when the family lived close by.

After the little boy ignored her at his own birthday party in favor of his grandpa (who actually shows up), she demanded weekly FaceTime calls

Since November, exactly two have happened. One was to announce the new pregnancy.

During the most recent call, MIL brought up her grand plan. She wanted advance notice when the baby was coming so she could drive up and watch the toddler while Emily and her husband were at the hospital.

She even suggested it would be easier than Emily’s parents flying in from across the country. Emily politely explained they already had everything covered. Her parents would fly in a couple of days before the due date.

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A close best friend who lived near the MIL was on standby to drive up if needed. They even had a trusted babysitter as backup. The toddler knows and trusts these people. He does not know his grandmother.

MIL immediately launched into her hurt, woe-is-me routine, complaining again about how the boy does not know her. Emily kept it diplomatic but honest: “He doesn’t.”

She pointed out that her best friend, who had actually lived with them for eight months, is someone the child feels safe with. She is not about to leave her toddler with someone who feels like a near-stranger.

MIL got huffy, said she understood, and hung up.The funny part, Emily noted, is that MIL called her instead of her own son. She knows Emily will at least try to be polite.

When Emily told her husband about the conversation, his response was spot on. “Why? So we can scramble to find a replacement after she flakes at the last minute?” He knows his mother well.

She has already planned and canceled two trips since they moved. The odds of her actually following through are low, and the stress of relying on her during such a vulnerable time is not worth it.

Emily and her husband are on the same page. They have a clear care plan that prioritizes their son’s stability and comfort during what will already be a big transition with a new baby sister.

Adding someone the toddler barely knows, especially someone with a track record of canceling and emotional manipulation, would only create more chaos.

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The MIL’s sudden interest now that a granddaughter is on the way feels especially telling. She had years to build a relationship with her grandson and chose not to.

This situation is classic for many families dealing with inconsistent or self-centered in-laws. Some grandparents treat grandkids like accessories they can pick up when it suits them, then act shocked when the children do not feel close.

Pregnancy and birth are already high-stress periods. The last thing a new mom needs is added emotional labor managing someone else’s hurt feelings while trying to bring a baby into the world and keep her older child secure.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Commenters loved the husband’s practical take and praised him for having her back. Most agreed it would be a hard no on letting MIL stay or provide childcare. 

botinlaw − Quick Rule Reminders: OP's needs come first, avoid dramamongering, respect the flair, and don't be an a__hole.

If your only advice is to jump straight to NC or divorce, your comment may be subject to removal at moderator discretion.

Available_Candy7124 − Your husband rocks!

Single_Ronda − So now MIL wants to be in your kids life now that you are expecting a girl.

I'm shaking my head at the audacity of certain people. Proud to read that hubby is with you on keeping her far away from both.

Several pointed out how disruptive it would be for the toddler to be left with someone he barely knows during such a big change. 

monkerry − That's a BIG NOPE! WHAT every woman needs in labor is having a basic stranger watching their toddler.

You know, because little ones are so good with change, NEVER feed off of anxiety and LOVE changing their rotines and being left with people they barely know.

Seriously shes living in her own little world isn't she? Let her woe as me all she likes.

The more things you can control and avoid in the impending chaos the better. The little one has enough " new" things about to happen,

keeping as much comfort around him is important for everyone to transition into the new chapter.

Plus i Seriously doubt she wouldn't be text/ calling a million times with questions or concerns whether out of necessity or simply to " be involved " .

Think she wouldn't show up at the hospital? Congratulations on the new edition! Take a breath you're doing great!

Teamtunafish − She gets to want all she can. Don't let it happen.

EpiphanyTwisted − Help that's neither wanted nor needed is not help at all. It's helping herself. Ignore the whining.

mela_99 − Don’t do it. No. No way. Do not host anybody.

Others noted that unwanted “help” is often more about the helper feeling involved than actually being useful. Advice centered on sticking to the existing plan, dropping the rope on forcing a relationship, and protecting their peace.

insomniaczombiex − Trust your husband. Use the plan you already have in place.

She’s made it clear she doesn’t want to put the effort in to spend time with you and your husband.

It’s going to be another thing she’ll cancel when you already have everything planned out. Time to drop the rope.

EatMyRoyalTarts321 − My in-laws proudly hold their grandparent title and didn't do anything to get to know my children.

They spent the time talking to my kids about their favorite other grandchildren. ..

They also think that their very presence is enough entertainment for the kids, so there's nothing to do at their house but they constantly insisted we let the kids stay...

They think that if they give them treats, toys, and pets (my MIL always has to like caress them? ) then my kids will remember them. Fortunately my kids are...

A few shared similar stories of in-laws who expected grandparent privileges without earning them.

Wonderful_Ideal_6994 − LOL he nailed it! !! We did use my MIL as childcare

but she thought it came with a 2 week stay after baby came home. It was definitely uncomfortable to have to tell her we didn’t need or want the help...

In the end, Emily is doing what many parents in similar spots eventually learn to do. She is putting her children’s needs and her own sanity first instead of managing her MIL’s emotions. The husband’s clear-eyed realism helps too.

Some relationships with in-laws improve with time and effort on both sides.

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Others stay distant because one side never bothers to show up. In this case, the MIL may keep feeling hurt, but the real consequence of her choices is a grandson who does not know her and a new granddaughter who may follow the same pattern if nothing changes.

Sometimes the kindest thing you can do for everyone is keep firm boundaries and let people reap what they have sown. Emily and her husband seem ready to do exactly that while focusing on the exciting new chapter ahead with their growing family.

Was the MIL’s offer genuine help, or just another way to insert herself? And how do you handle in-laws who want grandparent rights without doing the grandparent work? The comments were pretty united on this one.

 

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