Some family disagreements are about screen time, bedtime, or dessert before dinner. Others? They involve chainsaws, hot pans, and a crash course in 1950s gender roles. One woman’s in-laws decided her kids needed to be “toughened up” the old-fashioned way, by doing dangerous, age-inappropriate chores and being critiqued like contestants on a retro cooking show.
After months of biting her tongue, she finally told her husband’s parents exactly what she thought about their “lifestyle”, and the fallout was swift. Sisters-in-law piled on, the grandparents doubled down, and the internet had plenty to say about whether she went too far… or not far enough.
A woman and her husband confronted her in-laws after they pushed outdated gender roles on her son and daughter













Generational clashes over parenting styles aren’t new, but they’re often intensified when grandparents live nearby. According to a Pew Research Center study, 46% of parents say grandparents give unsolicited advice, and 15% report actual disagreements over discipline or household rules.
Here, the tension is about autonomy, safety, and outdated gender expectations. Dr. Susan Newman, a social psychologist specializing in family dynamics, explains that “grandparents sometimes believe their way is the only way, and they view deviation as poor parenting. This can lead to power struggles, especially if their values clash with modern safety standards”.
From a developmental perspective, both cooking and wood chopping are useful life skills, but age, maturity, and supervision are crucial. The American Academy of Pediatrics advises that children under 12 should not operate power tools like chainsaws, and that cooking tasks for children under 7 should be limited to simple, safe activities.
What’s most concerning here is the layer of gendered messaging, telling a boy his worth lies in physical labor and a girl hers in pleasing future spouses. Gender role socialization at a young age can limit self-perception and aspirations. A 2017 UNESCO report notes that such stereotypes can “restrict children’s career ambitions, skill development, and self-confidence.”
The in-laws may believe they’re preparing the kids for “real life,” but the mother sees it as reenacting the same restrictive upbringing she and her husband escaped. The healthiest resolution, according to family therapist Dr. Fran Walfish, is setting “firm, clear boundaries” and explaining the rationale, while limiting unsupervised access if those boundaries are ignored.
Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:
These Redditors called the grandparents’ behavior “toxic” and potentially dangerous, with some urging the family to move far away again




Some praised her for breaking the cycle and advised teaching the kids how to spot outdated or unsafe requests from relatives



These users pointed out there’s nothing wrong with teaching kids skills, just not through burns, chainsaws, or gendered insults






At its core, this isn’t just about firewood or bland casseroles, it’s about who gets to define “preparing kids for life” and how much of the past should shape the future. One side calls it building independence; the other calls it enforcing outdated, unsafe expectations.
Do you think this mom overreacted to old-school “tough love,” or was she right to shut it down before her kids inherited more than just their grandparents’ recipes?










