Parenting should be about nurturing confidence, not tearing it down. But one mom on Reddit found herself battling her husband’s overbearing mother, whose “constructive criticism” kept crushing their 13-year-old daughter’s passion for piano and theater.
Every time the girl performed, her grandmother showed up, only to dissect every tiny mistake and call her “disappointing.” The mom begged her husband to stop inviting his mother, but he insisted Grandma was just “being honest.”
When the daughter finally broke down crying after another harsh remark, the mom reached her limit and told her husband his mom wasn’t welcome anymore. That’s when everything exploded.
A mother demanded her husband stop inviting his mother to their daughter’s piano recitals and plays after years of cruel remarks disguised as “honesty”


























What the mother-in-law calls “constructive criticism” is actually destructive feedback, says psychologist Dr. Guy Winch, author of Emotional First Aid. “Constructive feedback focuses on growth and possibility. Destructive feedback focuses on inadequacy and shame.” The difference is empathy, and Grandma clearly lacks it.
Criticizing a child publicly, especially right after a performance, is one of the quickest ways to crush confidence.
A 2019 Frontiers in Psychology study found that children who experience repeated performance-related criticism show higher stress levels and reduced motivation. In simpler terms, kids who are constantly nit-picked stop trying.
Family therapist Dr. Jenn Mann adds that grandparents often “mistake control for care.” When parents or in-laws disapprove of a child’s interests, like this grandmother pushing for a medical career instead of music, they project their own insecurities and cultural expectations. That behavior, Mann explains in Psychology Today, “teaches children to equate love with conditional approval.”
The husband’s role here is equally important. Marriage counselor Dr. John Gottman has found that when one partner sides with their parent against their spouse or child, it damages not only the marriage but the parent-child bond as well. “Children remember who stood up for them,” Gottman notes. “Silence feels like betrayal.”
The healthiest step forward would be setting clear emotional boundaries, not just banning the grandmother from performances, but explaining why. If she refuses to change, the husband must choose to protect his daughter’s emotional well-being over his mother’s comfort.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
The petty squad urged savage clapbacks, like critiquing the husband’s “performance” or telling MIL to zip it, cheering the OP’s protective stance





These folks called out the husband’s failure, pushing therapy or even divorce to shield the daughter














The empathy crew slammed MIL’s cruelty as non-constructive, urging the OP to boost her daughter’s confidence with praise and block MIL’s toxic input











For a child, one cruel sentence can silence a passion forever, and for this 13-year-old, it nearly did. Critics may claim the mother “overreacted,” but when love turns toxic, boundaries aren’t control, they’re protection.
So, was she wrong to bar her mother-in-law from future performances, or is she the only one in the family defending her daughter’s happiness? Sometimes, standing up for your child means being the “villain” in someone else’s story, especially when that someone refuses to see the harm they cause.









