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She Refuses to Let Her Daughter-In-Law Birth in the Living Room, And Her Son Is Asking For An Apology

by Marry Anna
May 4, 2026
in Social Issues

When a family emergency brings relatives into your home, things often don’t go as planned, but for one woman, it wasn’t just the flooded house that caused chaos.

Her daughter-in-law’s water home birth plan was the final straw, especially when the only place to accommodate it was her already cramped living room.

Despite the growing tension, the mother-in-law stood firm, refusing to let her home be used for the birth.

She Refuses to Let Her Daughter-In-Law Birth in the Living Room, And Her Son Is Asking For An Apology
Not the actual photo

'AITA for ruining my daughter-in-law's birth plan?'

I need some opinions on this situation. My son and DIL are staying with me at the moment.

Their house is being fixed due to a flooding issue that happened about a week ago. A fire hydrant broke and flooded the houses near it.

Due to this there home needs some of the floors replaced, and it is not safe for them to be there while contractors deal with the damage.

My DIL is supposed to give birth to her first kid at the beginning of next month, and their home will not be fixed in time.

They have been staying with me and set up a little nursery in the guest bedroom.

My home is not big. I downsized years ago, so I live in a 2-bedroom, 1-bathroom home.

I learned this weekend that she was planning on having a water home birth and a midwife during it.

I thought she was going to the hospital, but that apparently wasn't the plan.

She plans to have the kid in a basically a blown-up pool that goes in the house.

The only two places it will fit are the living room or if I move my bed to the master bedroom.

I thought about it, and I am not comfortable with that happening in my home. I told her this today, and she was pissed.

We got into an argument, and she is mad that I ruined her birth plan. My son wants me to apologize and have it here.

Again, I am against it. I don't want her to give birth in my living room.

That conflict didn’t start with the inflatable pool, it started with two very different ideas of what “control” means during a major life event.

In this situation, the OP is hosting her son and daughter-in-law during an emergency, only to discover that her home is being treated as the setting for a planned home birth.

From the daughter-in-law’s perspective, a home birth, especially a water birth, often represents comfort, autonomy, and a carefully imagined experience. Losing that plan late in pregnancy can feel deeply upsetting.

But from the OP’s perspective, the issue is equally fundamental: this is her private home, a small space, and she is being asked to host a complex medical event involving equipment, bodily fluids, and potential emergencies, without being comfortable with it.

What looks like “ruining a plan” is, in reality, a clash between bodily autonomy and property boundaries. Both sides have valid concerns, but they operate on different assumptions.

The daughter-in-law is focused on her right to choose how she gives birth. The OP is focused on her right to decide what happens in her home.

The son, meanwhile, is trying to preserve the birth plan while relying on his mother’s flexibility, effectively asking her to absorb the disruption.

This tension reflects a broader conversation about childbirth choices and safety.

According to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, women do have the right to choose where they give birth, but they should be fully informed of the risks and benefits of each setting.

The same guidance states that “the safest place” for birth is generally a hospital or accredited birth center, where emergency care is immediately available .

While planned home births can involve fewer medical interventions, they also carry measurable risks: studies cited by ACOG show a more than twofold increase in perinatal death and a threefold increase in serious neonatal complications compared to hospital births.

These risks don’t mean home birth is inherently wrong, but they do highlight how dependent it is on proper conditions.

Safe home birth typically requires a low-risk pregnancy, a qualified midwife, and crucially, an environment that is prepared, sanitary, and supported by everyone involved.

It also requires rapid access to hospital care if complications arise, since emergencies like hemorrhage or fetal distress can develop unexpectedly.

In a temporary living arrangement where the homeowner is uncomfortable and space is limited, those conditions become harder to meet.

At the same time, research shows why the daughter-in-law feels so strongly. Studies on childbirth experience indicate that a sense of control and comfort during labor is closely linked to more positive psychological outcomes.

Many women choose home birth specifically to avoid medicalization and feel more at ease in a familiar setting.

But that sense of safety depends not just on the physical environment, it also depends on emotional support and the absence of conflict. A  birth taking place in a home where the host is reluctant or opposed may undermine that very goal.

Given this context, the OP’s refusal is not inherently unreasonable.

She is being asked to host a high-intensity, unpredictable event in a space she owns and occupies, and consent matters.

At the same time, the daughter-in-law’s frustration is understandable given the timing and emotional weight of childbirth planning.

A more workable path forward would likely involve exploring alternatives that preserve as much of the birth plan as possible, such as a birthing center or a hospital setting designed for low-intervention births, rather than trying to force the plan into an environment that lacks full support.

Ultimately, this situation highlights a difficult but important truth: autonomy has limits when it intersects with someone else’s space and boundaries.

Through OP’s experience, the core message becomes clearer, birth plans are deeply meaningful, but they don’t exist in a vacuum; they depend on consent, safety, and the realities of the environment in which they unfold.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These Redditors stress the importance of the OP’s right to set boundaries in their own home, especially when the situation involves safety and comfort.

bokatan778 − NTA. Absolutely not. Jesus, she should go to a hospital. A lot of hospitals have birthing tubs too. She should look into it.

BigSkyUser_40k − NTA, it is your property and home. Also, it would be good for your DIL to note that her birth plan was not ruined

by you, rather by whoever failed to maintain the fire hydrant and forced them out of their home.

SWGardener − As a former newborn ICU nurse, I can tell you birth plans often do not go as planned.

It’s one thing for a parent to take the responsibility for having a home birth in their own home or birthing center.

It’s something else completely to ask to do it in someone else’s home.

What happens to you if something goes wrong and the neonate passes in your home? How will you deal with those memories of your own home?

Will any family ever want to visit your home? Also, is there any liability with your homeowners' insurance, since you would be giving your permission for it to happen?

I honestly wish more parents would worry about the health of their child and not focus on the birth plan, which is ultimately for the mother.

Thanks for reading my TED talk. :)

These users agree that the OP’s decision is completely justified.

Tiger-Lily88 − Almost all instances of mothers-in-law interfering with the birth of their grandchild are wrong… except this one.

You’re entitled to an opinion and full veto power since this plan would happen in YOUR house. NTA.

LowBalance4404 − NTA and you aren't messing up her birthing plan. Her home flooded.

This is your home, and you get to decide what happens in it.

RevolutionarySoft742 − With the title, I was a little leery. I absolutely think you are NTA. They are guests in your home.

You said it’s not very big, so there just isn’t space. Unfortunately, circumstances happen out of our control, and plans have to adjust.

With every birth, plans may need to change- it’s unfortunate, but it happens.

I agree with PC that she should look into a birthing centre!

sun_and_stars8 − NTA, she can decide to do a homebirth when the location is in her home, but she doesn’t get to make that decision about someone else's home.

These commenters focus on the importance of safety and practicality.

needGuidance792087 − NTA, midwives have specific places for this.

They aren’t hospitals but more like midwife centers. She can go there if she really wants to.

TheYarnGoblin − *Reading the title before clicking* “Oh hell yeah, you probably suck.”

*After reading the post* “What in the f__k…” NTA.

PetersMapProject − NTA. Giving birth is messy, and according to a midwife friend of mine, if it goes wrong and they need to

get the mother out, they will simply slash the side of the birthing pool and flood your home so that they can start CPR as fast as possible.

Births can go horrifically wrong; I knew a woman who died due to an amniotic fluid embolism, about ten years ago, in a Western country with good healthcare.

There are many a child that's a cabbage because their birth went wrong. Home deliveries are for pizzas, not babies.

These users criticize the DIL for overstepping boundaries, calling her requests unreasonable and entitled.

extinct_diplodocus − NTA. This is what we call a "choosing beggar". She's staying in your home for free, and she wants to completely take it over.

Either home insurance or whoever is liable for the burst hydrant will pay for alternative lodgings.

They're welcome to make alternative arrangements for the birth.

The people who arrange the water birth are probably familiar with the problem of not enough space in the house, and could help,

once your son and DIL get over their sense of entitlement.

Tiny_Boat_7983 − NTA. I cannot even fathom giving birth in someone’s living room where I am a guest. Yikes. On. Bikes.

MarthaT001 − NTA There is no way I would allow this in my home, and I'm still in a larger home.

I guarantee that there's going to be water all over your floor from moving around.

Tell them you're sorry, but they need to get their insurance to cover a short-term rental.

(And no landlord is going to let them set up a swimming pool inside either.) There are birthing centers that offer water births at their OWN facilities.

These Redditors offer empathy for the DIL’s situation but maintain that the OP is not the one at fault here.

Zealousideal_You6901 − Can she not do the water birth in a hospital or her own parents' house?

YNTA, she doesn't get to force anything on you just cause she is pregnant and giving birth, she isn't the queen,

you were nice enough to put them up, asking this is too much, and you have every right to say no. They are ungrateful and trying to guilt you.

winnie_the_grizzly − NTA. You didn't ruin your DIL's birth plan; a broken fire hydrant did.

And that really sucks, and I feel for her. But this isn't your fault.

She's in a really tough place, hormonally, but I would just keep gently reminding her that you're just helping make Plan B

(giving birth in a hospital) work, not ruining Plan A. Also, I'm assuming that unless your son and his wife owned their home outright,

their mortgage company required them to hold fairly comprehensive home insurance, the type that covers alternate housing while the home is being rebuilt.

It might be worth reminding your son that their insurance may actually cover housing that could allow your DIL her Plan A.

The community is united in support of the OP, agreeing that while the DIL’s birth plan is important, the request to do a water birth in someone else’s home is unreasonable and comes with too many potential risks.

The OP is not obligated to comply, and the DIL should explore other, more suitable options. Do you think the DIL will eventually understand and find an alternative, or will this strain the relationship further?

How would you approach this situation if you were the OP? Share your thoughts below!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 3/3 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/3 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/3 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/3 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/3 votes | 0%

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Hello, lovely readers! I’m Marry Anna, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. As a woman over 30, I bring my curiosity and a background in Creative Writing to every piece I create. My mission is to spark joy and thought through stories, whether I’m covering quirky food trends, diving into self-care routines, or unpacking the beauty of human connections. From articles on sustainable living to heartfelt takes on modern relationships, I love adding a warm, relatable voice to my work. Outside of writing, I’m probably hunting for vintage treasures, enjoying a glass of red wine, or hiking with my dog under the open sky.

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