She’s 7.5 Months Pregnant With A Toddler, And Her Sister Still Asked Her To Host Dinner For 10

By the third trimester, most people are just trying to survive the day.

Between the constant exhaustion, the aching back, the interrupted sleep, and a toddler who is about to turn three, life already feels like a full-contact sport. So when this expectant mom’s sister casually asked her to host a full dinner for ten people, including five total strangers, she genuinely wondered if she was losing her mind.

Her sister was visiting from out of state. She had recently gotten engaged and wanted their families to meet. Fair enough. That is exciting. But instead of booking a restaurant or offering to organize something herself, she asked her heavily pregnant sister if she could host everyone at her house. Buy the food. Cook it. Clean up afterward. Entertain five people she had never met before.

All while 7.5 months pregnant and parenting a toddler.

The mom’s answer was simple. No.

She’s 7.5 Months Pregnant With a Toddler, and Her Sister Still Asked Her to Host Dinner for 10
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it unfolded.

'Sister trying to have me host dinner for our family + fiance's family while I'm 7.5 months pregnant and have a toddler?'

First time poster on this thread...title pretty much says it all. My husband and I have a toddler who turns 3 in a week and I'm 7.5 months pregnant.

My sister who is visiting from out of state this weekend recently got engaged and asked me if I had plans on Sunday then proceeded to tell me her fiance...

(5 people I've never met before) + them obviously + my mother and brother so including my husband and I, 10 people total to buy food, cook and clean for...

just straight up asked me to host, I told her no, that I wasn't expecting to host his family while pregnant at my home much less people I'm meeting for...

but would like to take her and her fiance out to dinner while they're in town...AITAH?. Edited for typos

The Ask That Left Her Stunned

It started innocently enough. Her sister asked if she had plans on Sunday. When she said no, the real request came out. Her fiancé wanted to know if she could host his family. Five of them. Plus the sister and fiancé. Plus their mom and brother. Plus her and her husband.

Ten people total.

There was no “Would you like to?” No “We’ll bring the food.” No “We’ll handle cleanup.” It was presented as a straightforward expectation.

The mom said she was caught off guard. Not just because of the size of the gathering, but because of the physical reality she was living in. At 7.5 months pregnant, even normal days require pacing and planning. Add in a toddler who is about to have a birthday, and the idea of scrubbing bathrooms and cooking for a crowd felt borderline absurd.

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She told her sister no. Calmly. Clearly. She explained she was not expecting to host his family while pregnant, especially people she had never met. But she offered an alternative. She would happily take her sister and fiancé out to dinner while they were in town.

It felt reasonable.

Apparently, she still worried it made her the villain.

Why the Request Felt So Off

Hosting ten people is work. It is planning, shopping, prepping, cleaning before, cleaning after, and being “on” the entire evening. Even without pregnancy, it is a commitment.

Add a third trimester body into the mix and it shifts from inconvenient to genuinely draining. Fatigue is real. Swelling is real. The mental load of preparing for a second baby while caring for a toddler is real.

What stung most was the assumption. Her sister did not ask what she was capable of. She did not offer to shoulder the effort. She simply treated the house and the labor as available resources.

It revealed a subtle dynamic many families struggle with. Sometimes the sibling who is settled, married, and owns a home becomes the default host. People assume space equals capacity. But capacity is not just square footage. It is energy, time, and emotional bandwidth.

And this mom had very little to spare.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

The overwhelming response was a resounding no. Many commenters could not believe someone would even suggest such a thing.

74Magick − F__k no. Tell her to arrange a dinner at a nice restaurant. (And she can pay for it! ) NTA

ZippyKoala − Hell no NTA. I'm not pregnant, my kid is in their late teens and there's STILL no way I would host a dinner for 10, five of whom...

Electronic_Goose3894 − Honestly, first thing out of my mouth would have been to ask her if she was on meth or did she just decide to take her brain for...

intrigued_eyes − NTA that is a lot to put on someone with that much going on.

do2g − Nope. She's blindly ignoring the massive amount of work that goes into throwing a dinner party for 10 people and how absurd it is to be asking someone...

shammy_dammy − You answer: "No. I cannot do that. " Done.

GoldCaterpillar3662 − NTA. This dinner for family and sister’s fiancé is something she should do! Asking OP to do this without offering any support or food, knowing you’re pregnant is...

Livinginthemiddle − You can tell her she can apologise to you when/if she has her own pregnancy for the stupid question and that you’ll send some nice restaurant recommendations.

Any-Split3724 − Not only No, but Hell No. You need to concentrate on your Toddler and pregnancy and not waste a bunch of energy and money, exhausting yourself hosting a...

Main-Ad2547 − I’d say yes if I didn’t have to buy and cook everything. . Like if she said “hey if we bring food and do all the cooking… your...

Boundaries Are Not Rude

At its heart, this situation is about boundaries.

Pregnancy often comes with an unspoken pressure to keep functioning at the same level as before. To prove you are still capable. To avoid seeming dramatic. But physical limits are not character flaws.

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Saying no is not selfish. It is responsible.

In fact, her response was thoughtful. She did not shut down the idea of meeting. She offered a solution that would allow everyone to gather without putting her health and energy on the line.

There is also something important about modeling boundaries, especially with a toddler watching. Children grow up seeing how adults treat their own limits. Choosing not to overextend herself sends a powerful message about self-respect.

Final Thoughts

In the end, this was never about dinner. It was about expectations.

Her sister may have been caught up in engagement excitement. But excitement does not override reality. A nearly eight-months-pregnant mom with a toddler is not a catering service.

Sometimes the healthiest thing you can say is a simple, complete sentence.

No.

Was she wrong for protecting her energy, or was this just a case of someone forgetting how much work goes into hosting? Either way, one thing is clear. Growing a human and raising another is already more than enough on her plate.

 

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