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Mom Fires Her Own Mother From Babysitting After She Refuses To Take Granddaughter To Class

by Annie Nguyen
March 30, 2026
in Social Issues

Parenting choices can get complicated when someone else is helping raise your child, even temporarily. OP arranged for her mom to babysit her daughter Ellie, with one important routine in place, a toddler class that helps with social skills, creativity, and development. Ellie loved it, even if it meant coming home messy.

The problem started when OP discovered her mom quietly stopped going and never mentioned it. What felt like a small change quickly became a question of honesty and respect.

OP decided to “fire” her mom from childcare, but now her mom says she’s being unfair and replacing family with a stranger. Was OP too harsh, or did she make the right call? Keep reading to find out what others think.

A mother fires her own mom from childcare after she secretly skips her child’s class, sparking family conflict

Mom Fires Her Own Mother From Babysitting After She Refuses To Take Granddaughter To Class
not the actual photo

'AITA for “firing” my mom from childcare over a $5 class?'

My husband and I have a 16 month old daughter, Ellie. I just went back to work part time and I had my mom watching Ellie 2 days a week.

Ellie goes to this little toddler class through our rec center twice a week.

It’s a 2 hour class and every class has free play, a circle time with a story and song, and an art project.

During free play the kids have 4 different table stations that they could visit including an art table, a corner of the room with all cars, trucks,

and trains, the house corner with a kitchen and baby dolls, the dramatic play area

(changes biweekly, I’ve seen a grocery store, vets office, and pizza shop), the book area, the block area, and the patio.

The patio has 2 water tables, 2 playhouses, a sandbox, tricycles, and little tykes cars.

Each class is only $5. Parents/caregivers are required to stay and supervise their children.

Ellie loves this class. She’s addicted to the chalkboards there and is starting to approach other babies.

She does taste test every foam block in the room and has eaten her fair share of crayons and finger paint,

on top of drenching herself in water then rolling around in the sandbox and covering her in paint

but it’s nothing that can’t be solved without a change of clothes and hosing her off. I love how great the class is for her development.

She is starting to know the names of colors and she can sit down and play with toys for longer stretches.

My mom hated the toddler classes.

She describes it as chaos and insists that a walk around the block or a trip to the library is just as good,

if not better for her development and is much less messy.

I still insisted that she take Ellie, which she agreed to, then stopped taking her behind my back.

I only noticed when I realized we haven’t gotten art projects back in a while.

Since she lied to me about where she’s been going with my daughter and refused to take her to a class that I truly believe is good for her,

I “fired” my mom from babysitting and hired a college student to stay with her while I’m working.

Now my mom is upset that I’m restricting her access to her granddaughter and leaving her with a stranger,

which is the one thing she was trying to prevent by babysitting my daughter for me.

Now I want to know if I was the a__hole for firing my mom and not having Ellie see her nearly as much over a $5 class.

There’s a quiet fear many parents carry, especially in busy, imperfect seasons of life: am I being fair, or am I slowly treating my children differently without realizing it? It doesn’t come from one big decision. It grows from small patterns who gets the traditions, who gets the extra attention, who seems to have more “magic” attached to their childhood.

That emotional instinct the original poster (OP) is feeling is not irrational. It’s grounded in real psychological patterns that researchers have studied for decades.

In this situation, OP isn’t reacting to a single missed party or one uneven moment. She’s noticing a pattern forming. Her son’s birthday has become a full experience, decorations, anticipation, a weeklong sense of excitement tied to the leprechaun tradition.

Meanwhile, her daughter’s celebrations, while still loving, haven’t carried that same symbolic weight. What OP is really responding to is not logistics, but meaning. Children don’t calculate fairness by counting gifts or guests. They feel it through repeated emotional experiences.

This concern aligns with research on parental favoritism and sibling dynamics. Studies show that even subtle differences in how children are treated can shape how they see themselves within the family.

For example, research has found that perceived favoritism can influence sibling relationships and emotional well-being, especially when children interpret differences as unfair rather than situational.

Another study shows that parental favoritism is negatively associated with quality of life and can increase sibling rivalry, particularly for the child who feels less prioritized .

What makes this more complex is that favoritism is often unintentional. Research also suggests that parents may naturally treat children differently based on personality, birth order, or circumstance, without realizing the emotional impact. In other words, OP’s situation is not unusual but awareness is what prevents it from becoming harmful over time.

This is why OP’s concern matters. She isn’t trying to make things perfectly equal. She’s recognizing how patterns turn into memories.

A repeated, visible celebration for one child, like a week of decorations and playful rituals, can carry emotional weight that a quieter celebration may not match, even if both children are loved equally. Over time, those differences can shape how each child interprets their place in the family.

At the same time, it’s important to recognize that children don’t need identical experiences to feel secure. What they need is a sense that they are equally valued. That can come from different traditions, different kinds of attention, or simply intentional moments that belong just to them.

In the end, small, thoughtful adjustments, like creating meaningful traditions for each child or balancing the emotional “spotlight”, can prevent those quiet questions from ever forming. Because what children remember most isn’t fairness in numbers. It’s how consistently they felt seen.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These users agree the real problem is the grandmother lying about the child’s whereabouts

Broken-Ice-Cube − The lying is the issue here. While I'm a big believer in they won't melt and a messy child is a happy child I can understand

If others aren't okay with letting a child they're looking after get super messy.

Granny not wanting to have to deal with a sopping wet paint covered kiddo isn't unreasonable.

What is is lying to you about where you kid was for weeks on end.

Makes you wonder what else she'd lie about. You should be able to fully trust the people your trust with your kid NTA

jupitersbears − NTA. Your mom lied about what she was doing. That is a firing offense full stop.

I don’t care if the class was terrible or the best thing ever invented for kids - that’s irrelevant.

Your mom has proven she will lie to your face when she disagrees with you about how to raise your daughter.

I would not leave her alone with your daughter until you’re damn sure she understands

why she was wrong and won’t do it again, or your child is old enough to advocate for herself.

justanother1014 − NTA it’s not about the class or even the $5, it’s lying to you about what she’s doing with your kid.

With that trust broken, how would you know she did anything she said?

conriva − NTA. Anyone saying this is about a $5 class is completely missing the forest for the trees.

The absolute baseline of childcare is: I need to know where my child is.

Period. The moment she lied to your face about Ellie’s location, she ended the arrangement herself.

You didn't "fire" her over a messy art project; you stopped leaving your daughter with someone

who thinks it's okay to gaslight you about your kid's whereabouts. Trust isn't a sliding scale—once the honesty is gone, the safety is gone too.

BeatrixFarrand − NTA. You didn't make alternate arrangements over a $5 class.

You made them because she lied to you over and over again about your daughter's developmental education and whereabouts.

She lied to you because she thinks HER way of raising your daughter is better and more important than your own.

mermaidpro2 − NTA she should not be lying about where your daughter is

This group backs OP for standing firm and prioritizing parenting authority

Longjumping_Box_8144 − You didn’t fire your mom for the class, she was fired for lying about caring for your daughter the way she agreed to.

If she’s doing this now she will only get worse in the future if she thinks she’s right about something.

She sounds like she’d be one of those grandparents who sneak the kid to be baptized without asking when the parents are agnostic.

MajesticMushroomz − NTA - if she was ok lying to you about this, she will lie to you about other things that could have more impact. Your child, your decisions.

Protowhale − NTA. If Mom can't respect your wishes as a parent now, it's likely that she'll just keep pushing boundaries.

jerseygirl414 − NTA. Your mom decided she knows what's best for your daughter and disrespected your wishes.

She stopped taking your daughter behind your back (lied). Glad to see you stood your ground! You are the parent - she's not.

iDryft − NTA Wait...has your mother also been pocketing that 5$ per class each time?

Your mother can't complain about having her time restricted when she chose to put herself in that position.

It gives me a bad impression that you would tell your mother that you're child is punished and no allowed chocolate

and she would go behind your back and take her to an icecream shop because she feels like it and doesn't care about your wishes about your child.

It's best to nip the behavior in the b__t early then when its too late.

These commenters suggest the grandmother may have been overwhelmed or uncomfortable with the class environment

Soft-Tangelo-6884 − NTA I’m a nanny and work mostly with kids this age.

I’ve come to realize most of the grandparents of boomerish age (50s-70s) can’t handle most of what is best practice now for kids in kid spaces,

which looks super messy and chaotic, because they weren’t allowed to be like that and they can’t handle it with their grandchildren.

It’s more upsetting and sad your Mom lied to you over this.

Missing the actual class for a month or so isn’t a huge deal but she did lose your trust and realistically she may never earn it back.

Lighthouse_on_Mars − NTA, It sounds like the class over stimulated your mom.

Instead of being an adult and telling you that she finds it too loud and obnoxious at her age, She lied to you.

It sucks that she's losing out on time with her granddaughter, but that's just how life works.

Either she puts up with the obnoxious loud class with other kids in it.

Or she doesn't and loses time that could have been spent with her granddaughter. It's as simple as that.

This group highlights that the class benefits the child’s growth and social development

SleepyDeluxe − NTA. Going to classes like this is good for children. They learn from eachother and learn to socialise together.

She shouldn't have lied about not going to the class, the fact that she lied means she can't be trusted. What else could she be lying about?

What if your child got hurt whilst with her, would she make the right decisions and get them seen to? Or try to cover up what happened?

She lied about something so small when she could have been honest. That means she can lie about the big things.

allyearswift − The classes sound lovely and useful to your daughter.

You, the parents made the decision that this is developmentally appropriate and asked her to take your daughter.

She not only overrode your parenting decision, she lied to you. You’re NTA.

You aren’t punishing her by removing access to your daughter (your daughter isn’t you mom’s dress-up doll),

you are providing your daughter with a fun activity that you want her to experience.

(Messy without judgment is ever so good for kids. Especially girls, who all too often are expected to be prim and proper at all times).

Your mom refused to take your daughter.

That you don’t want to sign up for more lies and undermining is the consequence of her behaviour. NTA.

So where would you draw the line? Is one lie enough to step back, or should family get more grace when intentions seem harmless? Drop your thoughts below

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 6/6 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/6 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/6 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/6 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/6 votes | 0%

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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