She Refused To Spend Her Summer Babysitting Her Grandkids, And Her Daughter Completely Lost It

For most people, summer break sounds relaxing. For this 53-year-old college professor, it sounded like months of unpaid childcare, emotional manipulation, and nonstop stress.

The woman explained that she works full time during the academic year and usually spends June and July focusing on professional training and career development. It is the only stretch of time she really gets for herself. But her daughter, Katie, had apparently already decided those months belonged to her.

Katie, a 26-year-old stay-at-home mom of three, had been dropping hints for months that she “couldn’t be home with the kids all summer.” Eventually the hints turned into direct requests. She wanted her parents to keep the children for days, sometimes weeks, at a time.

The professor admitted that saying “no” to her daughter rarely goes smoothly. Katie has a habit of screaming, insulting, and throwing tantrums until someone gives in. And for years, they usually did.

Then came Mother’s Day weekend, and everything boiled over.

She Refused to Spend Her Summer Babysitting Her Grandkids, and Her Daughter Completely Lost It
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it all unfolded:

'AITAH for refusing to watch my grandkids on my summer break?'

AITAH for refusing to watch my grandkids during Summer break. Me (53F), full time college professor.

My daughter (26F), stay-at-home mom. Grandkids (8M, 5F, 1F). My daughter, let's call her Katie, has 3 kids and lives with her boyfriend.

She is a stay-at-home mom with no other responsibilities. I work as a full-time professor and have the months of June and July off.

I typically use this time for training and professional development. Katie has hinted many times through the spring semester that

she can't be home with the kids all summer and even has gone as far as asking me to keep them for a few weeks at a time.

She has quite the explosive temper and whenever I don't do as she asks she throws a fit: screaming, yelling, and name calling until I cave.

The day before Mother's Day she wanted me to watch the 1yr old. I told her that I am injured (hurt my knee and it is difficult to walk) and...

She threw a fit and told me to grow up and that dad should "act like a man" and just get over himself.

We eventually caved and took all the kids so they wouldn't be around her that day.

Fast-forward to the next day when she blocked my phone number and her dad's and didn't even call to say Happy Mother's Day.

That is all fine, but the next day she calls her dad all nicey-nice and asks if he can watch her kids just one day a week during the summer...

He tried to cave but it was an ABSOLUTELY NOT! from me. Now everyone thinks I am the A-hole but honestly I would rather work all summer than have to...

My husband says it's for the grandkids and not her but I can't help but think we are rewarding her bad behavior. So, AITAH?

The day before Mother’s Day, Katie asked her parents to watch her one-year-old.

Her mother explained that she had recently injured her knee and was struggling to walk. Her husband was exhausted too. They genuinely did not feel capable of handling childcare that day.

Katie exploded.

According to the post, she told her mother to “grow up” and insulted her father for not “acting like a man.”

The argument escalated to the point where the grandparents finally caved and took not just the baby, but all three children. Mostly because they did not want the kids stuck in the middle of her anger.

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That alone would have been enough to leave most people emotionally drained. But the next day, Katie blocked both of her parents’ phone numbers and never even wished her mother a happy Mother’s Day.

Then, almost immediately afterward, she called back acting perfectly pleasant.

This time, she asked if her father could watch the kids “just one day a week” during the summer so she could have a break.

Her husband started to soften. The grandmother did not.

For the first time, she flat-out refused.

What makes this situation messy is not just the childcare request. It is the emotional pattern underneath it. The grandmother clearly loves her grandkids.

She even admitted that part of her feels guilty because the children are innocent in all of this. But she also recognizes something unhealthy happening in the family dynamic.

Every time Katie screams or blocks contact, her parents eventually fold. And every time they fold, the behavior works.

A lot of Reddit users noticed that immediately.

One commenter bluntly wrote, “You and your husband are enabling her each time you give in to her tantrums.”

Another said, “Help should be appreciated, not expected.”

A few people were harsher, pointing out that Katie’s entitlement likely grew over years of weak boundaries. It stung, but the original poster seemed aware there was truth in it.

Psychologists say these situations are incredibly common between parents and adult children. According to an article from Verywell Mind, setting boundaries with adult children is not about punishment. It is about creating healthier relationships based on mutual respect rather than guilt or obligation.

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The article explains that many parents struggle to shift from “rescuer” to “supportive mentor,” especially when adult children react emotionally to limits being set.

Experts quoted in the piece note that boundaries are necessary when a relationship begins causing emotional exhaustion, resentment, or dependency.

Similarly, Psychology Today explains that constantly rescuing adult children can unintentionally reinforce unhealthy dependence. The goal is not rejection. It is teaching accountability while preserving respect on both sides.

That seems to be exactly what this grandmother is wrestling with.

She is not refusing because she hates her grandchildren. She is refusing because she no longer wants abuse to be the entry fee for being part of the family.

And honestly, her injury matters too. People kept glossing over that part. Watching three young children, including a toddler, is physically exhausting even for healthy adults.

Expecting someone with a knee injury to do it because “family helps family” feels unfair at best.

What also stood out was how quickly Katie switched personalities. One minute she was screaming and blocking numbers.

The next she was “nicey-nice” because she needed something again. Readers immediately recognized the pattern because many have dealt with some version of it in their own families.

Sometimes the hardest thing for parents is realizing that love and access are not the same thing.

You can love your children deeply and still refuse to be manipulated by them.

Reddit Had Plenty to Say About This One:

Most commenters strongly sided with the grandmother.

CptKUSSCryAllTheTime − NTA. Give her a list of daycare centers in your area.

shammy_dammy − NTA. Her kids, she can watch them.

Embarrassed_Hat_2904 − Why would you do anything for someone so abusive to you?

Some encouraged her to stick to her boundaries for once, while others suggested daycare lists, vacations, or simply turning off the phone.Dipshitistan − You’ve raised quite the entitled little angel there. NTA, but where does the attitude come from?

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JohnExcrement − Oh hell no, NTA. I’m a grandma who provides occasional childcare but if my son requested this I believe I’d laugh in his face.

Vivid_Bluejayz − NTA. Stop caving. Her kids, her responsibility. Help should be appreciated, not expected.

A few people pointed out that the bigger issue was not babysitting, but years of rewarding tantrums with compliance.GetawarrantCO − Ohhh hell NO. NTA, she's a stay at home mom. Sure, if you like the kids,

keep them for a couple overnights but no, you raised your kids. My mom adores her grandkids and I would never ask this

Important-Nose3332 − I mean… it makes sense that she ended up an entitled teen mom. You are bad at setting boundaries and your child obviously doesn’t respect you.

Never too late ig but your child is a reflection of how you raised her. Time to make changes NOW. (Before you are a grandmother to another teen mom’s kids).

Different_Nothing973 − Tell her the same thing she said about her dad. Tell her to grow up and act like a mom.

different-take4u − NTA, you and your husband are enabling her each time you give in to her tantrums.

Why don’t you and your husband take a nice long vacation out of town so she can’t ask or throw a tantrum when she is told no. If you can’t...

Another thing you might want to do is remind her that when she asks someone for something she has to accept that they may say no and not be upset...

If she chooses to block y’all, let her, as she has already demonstrated the minute she wants something she will ask. This will not change until you change your behavior.

All anyone can do is control their behavior and you are not controlling behavior very well by giving in.

There is something deeply sad about parents feeling afraid to say no to their own adult children. Especially when the fear is not disappointment, but verbal abuse and emotional fallout.

At the same time, boundaries rarely appear overnight. Families build these patterns together, slowly, over years.

This grandmother may not be able to change her daughter overnight, but refusing to surrender her entire summer might finally be the first real boundary she has set in a long time.

The question now is whether she can hold it.

Was this a necessary act of self-respect, or should grandparents step in no matter what?

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