Weddings are supposed to bring families together, but sometimes they reopen old wounds instead. For one father, what should have been a joyful moment has turned into a standoff with his own kids, all because of one unexpected request.
After years of complicated family history involving divorce, caregiving, and resentment, his children made it clear they wouldn’t attend unless their grandmother was invited too.
Now, he’s stuck between protecting his boundaries on his big day and risking his kids not showing up at all.
























That ultimatum didn’t come out of nowhere, it’s the visible edge of a much deeper, long-running strain.
In this situation, the OP is caught between a personal boundary (not wanting his ex-mother-in-law at his wedding) and a practical reality: his children are not simply guests, but long-term caregivers with limited freedom.
From his perspective, the request feels unreasonable, this is his wedding, planned well in advance, and he believes alternative care should be arranged. But from the children’s perspective, the issue isn’t preference, it’s constraint.
Their refusal to attend without their grandmother reflects the reality that they are responsible for her care in a way that restricts even major life participation.
What looks like defiance is, more likely, a lack of viable options combined with years of accumulated fatigue.
That emotional layer matters. The children’s comment about OP needing to “step up” suggests that, in their view, the divorce didn’t just end a marriage, it redistributed responsibilities, leaving them to absorb a caregiving role they didn’t choose.
Whether that interpretation is fully fair or not, it shapes how they experience this conflict.
OP, meanwhile, may feel he already resisted this situation years ago and shouldn’t be pulled back into it now. Both sides are responding not just to the wedding, but to unresolved meaning attached to past decisions.
This reflects a broader and increasingly studied issue: young and informal caregivers carrying significant emotional and logistical burdens.
A 2024 systematic review on young caregivers found that the number of young people providing care to relatives is rising globally, driven by aging populations and chronic illness, with many taking on responsibilities typically associated with adults.
Research also shows that caregiving is not a neutral role. Studies based on national caregiving data highlight that caregiver burden includes emotional, social, and financial strain, often leading to measurable negative health outcomes.
More recent findings reinforce how intense that strain can become.
A 2026 summary of caregiving data reports that around 53 million people provide unpaid care, and roughly 40% experience symptoms of burnout such as emotional exhaustion and reduced well-being.
Among younger caregivers, evidence from The Lancet Public Health indicates they are more likely to experience poorer mental and physical health compared to their peers, especially when caregiving is long-term and unsupported.
In other words, the children’s burnout, described by OP, is not unusual; it’s a documented outcome of sustained caregiving responsibility.
Health psychologist Dr. Steven A. Cohen, a contributor to national caregiving research, emphasizes that caregiver burden is “multidimensional,” affecting emotional, social, and financial domains simultaneously.
This framing is useful here: the children’s insistence isn’t just about logistics for one night, it reflects a broader condition where their time, autonomy, and emotional energy are already stretched thin.
Given that context, OP’s initial refusal is understandable on a personal level but incomplete as a solution.
His updated plan, offering to pay for a caregiver, is a meaningful shift because it addresses the actual constraint rather than framing the issue as a matter of principle.
A constructive next step would be to involve his children in selecting a caregiver they trust, acknowledging their experience and burnout rather than dismissing it.
At the same time, maintaining a boundary around the guest list is still reasonable; the key difference is whether that boundary is paired with support.
Ultimately, this situation highlights how invisible responsibilities reshape what “reasonable” looks like.
Through OP’s experience, the core message becomes clearer: when people are carrying ongoing, high-burden roles, conflicts aren’t just about single events, they’re about accumulated strain.
Resolving them requires not only setting boundaries, but also recognizing and addressing the weight others have been quietly carrying.
Check out how the community responded:
These commenters believe the ex is still pulling strings, using the kids as leverage to disrupt the wedding.






This group focuses on responsibility.










These users highlight how unusual the request is. Inviting an ex-mother-in-law to a wedding is already a stretch.






These Redditors take a more strategic view.










A smaller group expresses skepticism, questioning missing details or inconsistencies.






The community largely agrees the OP is not wrong for drawing a boundary. This isn’t just about a guest list. It’s about refusing to let old dynamics hijack a new chapter.
The harder question sits underneath everything. Are the kids protecting someone, or avoiding something? And if they don’t show up, do you bend… or finally break the pattern?
















