Everyone knows toddlers are tiny, adorable dictators. They choose one specific food, one specific color, and one specific phase to torture their parents with until they magically pivot to the next fixation.
In this case, it’s the “must be frozen” waffle.
When one pregnant mom left her two stepdaughters with her own mother for a weekend away, she expected a few bumps. She did not expect a full-blown war over a carbohydrate, or for her mother to actively hide food from a two-year-old.
Now, she’s laying down the law, even if it means losing her free childcare.
Now, read the full story:



















We need to start by giving a massive high-five to OP. Not only is she stepping up as a full-time, loving stepmom to two young girls whose biological mother walked away, but she is doing this while pregnant. Her patience level is likely at an all-time low.
Her attempts to keep the routine stable while they were gone were wise and necessary, and her mother’s complete disregard for those instructions is the true crisis here, not a frozen waffle. The grandmother wasn’t just attempting to enforce her own rules; she was actively trying to starve a two-year-old into compliance, which is a massive boundary violation.
The conflict over the frozen waffle highlights a major generational clash in parenting philosophies. OP subscribes to the low-stress, “at least she’s eating” philosophy, while her mother embodies the “children must obey” standard.
The mother’s approach, known as coercive feeding, is counterproductive. Trying to force a child to eat food they reject only increases food aversion (known as neophobia) and turns mealtimes into battlegrounds.
Many modern parenting experts recommend the Division of Responsibility in Feeding (DOR). The Ellyn Satter Institute, which developed DOR, explains the basic rule: “Parents are responsible for what food is served, when it is served, and where the meal takes place. The child is responsible for how much to eat and whether to eat.”
This principle empowers the child with autonomy, which is exactly what OP is doing by allowing Nikki to choose her food texture and Evie to choose her clothes. Evie’s mismatched outfit—cat shirt, crocs, and a tiara—is a healthy expression of four-year-old independence.
Grandparent boundary conflicts are shockingly common. According to a 2023 survey by Pew Research Center, 61% of parents report sometimes or often disagreeing with their parents or in-laws about how to raise their children. When the disagreement involves hiding food from a toddler, the parent must step in decisively.
OP set a crystal-clear boundary: follow the routine or lose access. This wasn’t weaponizing the kids; it was protecting them from an unnecessary and manipulative power struggle.
Check out how the community responded:
The majority of Redditors enthusiastically backed the mom, stating that the grandmother had completely violated boundaries and routines.







There was heavy criticism for the grandmother’s manipulative tactics, especially hiding the food and trying to enforce her own outdated rules.
![This Grandma Tried to Starve a 2-Year-Old Into Eating Scrambled Eggs [Reddit User] - Eating unhealthy is better than not eating, but don't waffles have eggs and stuff and need to be cooked?](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/wp-editor-1761897288864-1.webp)

A few commenters suggested that the mom was being too lax and risking her free help over a minor disagreement.







The grandmother used the free babysitting as an opportunity to criticize and override the parents’ wishes, a massive disrespect to the OP, especially since she is pregnant and desperately needs a break.
The rule is simple: when you babysit, you follow the parents’ instructions. Period. The OP was right to draw a firm line. Free childcare is never worth compromising a child’s trust or a parent’s boundaries.
Do you agree that a frozen waffle is better than a hunger strike? And was the grandmother trying to help, or simply imposing her will?








