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Tired Mom Finally Snapped When Her MIL Claimed She Was ‘Building Bad Habits’ With Her Newborn

by Katy Nguyen
November 2, 2025
in Social Issues

Parenthood brings joy, exhaustion, and a steady stream of advice you didn’t ask for. For new parents, even a well-meaning comment can sound like criticism, especially when it comes from family.

After one mother-in-law referred to her newborn grandchild as “my baby” and warned against letting the infant nap on her parents, the tension rose fast.

The new mom’s response turned a simple phone call into a full-blown misunderstanding.

Tired Mom Finally Snapped When Her MIL Claimed She Was ‘Building Bad Habits’ With Her Newborn
Not the actual photo

'AITA for telling my MIL off for her comment regarding my 5-day-old?'

My husband’s mom called to ask how the baby was doing, and he told her that she was good and was currently taking a nap on him.

(She was extremely supportive during the entire pregnancy and was even there for the birth, so her calls were welcomed.)

She responded by saying that it’s not good to let her sleep on us. An annoying comment, but whatever.

My husband tells her that there’s nothing wrong with it, and we love letting her sleep on us. Then she proceeded to say, “Don’t build bad habits with my baby”.

That one got to me. Ignoring the 'my baby, I said, “You can’t build habits with a newborn.”

In a sarcastically cheerful tone, she says, “Yes, you can, I’ve raised three children!”

I matched her tone and said, “Actually, no, you can’t! It’s science!” Then she hung up.

After that, she sends me a VERY long message about how she has never been able to tell how I feel about her and how she hopes one day we...

She also said she feels like I don’t want to hear anything she has to say when it comes to the baby, and she wants to be able to give...

(This was referencing the phone call as well as a couple of other things she had suggested previously. I had told her we wouldn’t be doing those things because we...

I responded by telling her I had no idea where all this was coming from, as I felt we already had a close relationship, and I apologized if I ever...

I also said that while I didn’t want to invalidate her experience as a mother, I didn’t really want advice unless I asked for it.

I said I’m glad that what she did worked for her, but all babies are different, and I’m constantly doing research and making decisions based on that.

I finished off by saying that if I want advice that I will absolutely come to her, and I want her to be a HUGE part of our daughter’s life.

She then said that invalidating her experience as a mother was exactly what I was doing, and she was sad that I was being so closed off.

Our relationship has been rocky ever since, and sometimes I wonder if I should have just kept my mouth shut and smiled and nodded instead. So, AITA?

This story may appear minor at first glance, but beneath the surface, it’s a rich collision of new-parent nerves, grandparent expectations, and boundary warfare.

The OP, days into motherhood, wound up in a phone exchange with her mother-in-law (MIL) over a comment about the baby napping on the father.

The MIL casually said: “Don’t build bad habits with my baby.” The OP responded: “Actually, no, you can’t! It’s science!” and the relationship soured from there.

Here’s the crux: The OP and her husband let their newborn nap on dad, they’re happy with that. The MIL intervenes, suggesting the parents are “building habits.”

The OP, feeling both protective of her decisions and under-cut by an insinuation, snaps back, and the MIL says she feels shut out of the baby’s life.

On one side, new parents defending their choices and asserting autonomy. On the other, a grandparent craving inclusion, feeling disregarded and dismissed. Motivations clash, control versus respect, experience versus evidence, helpfulness versus intrusion.

This taps into a broader social issue of how the arrival of a baby inevitably triggers role-shifts, unsolicited advice, and boundary testing. According to Parents magazine, “setting boundaries for a newborn with extended family is essential for a new parent’s peace of mind.”

Studies show that when grandparents overstep, new parents experience higher stress and feel less autonomous. The dynamic of power, love and expectation is never simple.

Clinical psychologist Dr. Julie Gottman writes: “In times like these, it is essential to set healthy boundaries so that your relationship with your parents (and their relationship with your child) can continue to endure.”

In the OP’s situation, that’s exactly what’s at stake: the OP is doing boundary-setting in real time, albeit with some heat, to preserve both her role as a parent and her relationship with her MIL.

The OP and her husband should schedule a calm conversation with the MIL, acknowledge her eagerness to help, express gratitude for her support, then clearly state their parenting values and preferences.

They might say, “We appreciate your experience and will ask when we need advice; for now we’re trying this approach.”

The OP could soften her tone with the MIL, then follow through by inviting her into a defined role (e.g., “We’d love for you to come over and cuddle the baby at this time every week”).

Creating collaborative routines helps shift the dynamic from conflict to inclusion.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

These commenters applauded the OP’s calm, science-backed response.

Elemental_surprise − NTA. Here’s what I told my own MIL. “It must have been so hard to be a new parent when the only options were advice from others or...

Then it’s finally your turn to be the advice giver, and the internet takes it away.

But I have the absolute privilege to have 30 more years of research and easy access to all of it whenever I need.

Nobody is saying you were a bad parent, and you absolutely did the best with what you had.

I will also be doing the best with what I have, and I’m so privileged for the additional research and accessible knowledge.

I’m happy to ask whenever I have questions and tips; potty training comes to mind. But what I need most right now is a non-judgmental listening ear”.

polynomialpurebred − NTA. What was established as norms a few decades ago certainly aren’t the norms now.

I’m close to 60, and my parents weren’t aware that drinking/ smoking during pregnancy was a big deal.

When my peers had kids, they weren’t allowed to so much as have eggs over easy. And I am sure my nieces/nephews' peers had protocols I am not familiar with.

For starters, insights into post-partum depression/anxiety/ psychosis are much keener now than even in my generation, and I am glad for it.

The world didn’t stop, and new knowledge ceased when these women had babies.

It is arrogance on their part that their lived experiences with small samples justify defying peer-reviewed up-to-date protocols being evaluated in conjunction with your combined medical records.

Fatality_of_Choice − NTA. I feel like people confuse building a habit with getting used to something.

Baby is getting used to napping on you. Baby is adapting to it. When you introduce the crib, the baby will adapt/get used to the crib.

The longer the baby goes without being exposed to something, it may need to adapt.

This isn’t because the baby is “spoiled” but just because the baby isn’t used to it yet and is used to something else.

The newborn phase is all about establishing connection and comfort. Once a baby has those things, it can make a lot of other things easier later on.

This group, made up mostly of parents and grandparents, celebrated the OP for being firm yet respectful.

GnomePun − My ex-mil took me as doing things differently to meaning I saw her as a bad mom, and she took it personally that I didn't want to parent...

I only saw her as a bad mom after she reacted so poorly to healthy boundaries regarding MY baby. NTA.

Senior_Parking6305 − NTA, you had me at her saying “my baby”. I’m a Gen X mom, have recently obtained some grandkids, the audacity.

When the parents want advice, they ask; when they don’t, I STFU.

I was not a perfect parent; they won’t be either, but they will do their best, and short of something truly harmful like abuse, how they choose to raise their...

Grandkids are not a “redo”; they are a gift that we get for surviving parenting (as our granddogs and grandcats).

Chef_Mama_54 − I’m a 70-year-old grandmother, and boy am I proud of you. I can’t imagine acting like I knew so much more about my grandchild than my daughter did.

So keep it up, and hopefully your MIL will realize that you know what you’re doing and understand that when/if you need her, you will certainly ask. Enjoy that, baby!

Better_Housing3122 − When I got unsolicited advice about my kids, I would say, "You’ve given me a lot to think about." (In a thoughtful tone of voice.)

In my head, I’m thinking that’s a stupid idea. I didn’t need to justify my choices, and it shut down the arguments.

These Redditors encouraged the OP to embrace honesty over harmony.

JadieBugXD − NTA. I feel like you’re coming at this from the perspective of “if I had kept my mouth shut, we would still have a good relationship,” but you...

I’m not saying that you or MIL were being fake, but the relationship you thought you had wasn’t really the relationship that you had.

Shadow4summer − NTA. Better to stop this behavior now before it continues for years.

You’re right, she raised her kids, now you get to raise yours. And that is not her baby.

This commenter lightened the thread with humor.

Frosty-Elevator2575 − NTA. My mum wanted me to get rid of our cat because "cats can smell the milk on the baby's breath and suck the breath out of them...

Old wives' tale for SIDS, anyone?

These users roasted the MIL’s overreach, saying the OP needed to shut down the “my baby” talk immediately.

MangoAngelesque − NTA. Your baby, your rules. And nip that “my baby” crap in the bud, quick, fast, and in a hurry.

She’s gonna insist on her grandma's name being “Mom-mom” before you know it.

Extreme-Pirate1903 − NTA. And frankly, there are only two things you need to be spending any mental energy on right now: caring for your baby and caring for yourself.

If she had more recent memories of new motherhood, she would know that questioning you, making long-term predictions about how the baby will behave in the long term, and offering...

mantock − NTA, she was being intrusive and bossy. She needs to back off and stop playing the victim.

Wrapping things up, these users praised the OP’s tone, gentle yet assertive.

General_Relative2838 − NTA. Your response was kind and loving but firm. There was nothing wrong with it.

perfidious_snatch − NTA, and you’re right. She gave advice that was both unsolicited and wrong.

You handled it well... Hopefully, MIL will chill out, because she sounds difficult based on this situation.

This clash between generations struck a familiar nerve for many new parents online. The Redditor’s reaction felt like a mix of postpartum exhaustion and boundary-setting colliding with a mother-in-law’s need to feel valued.

Do you think she crossed the line by snapping back, or was it the wake-up call her MIL needed? Share your perspective, this story perfectly captures that delicate dance between love and control.

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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