WIBTA if I told my grandmother she’s the reason I don’t want to “Come home”?

A woman in her 20s thought building a stable life with her husband would finally bring peace. Instead, it became the source of constant tension with the person who raised her. Pregnant, already caring for a toddler, and living twelve hours away, she found herself repeatedly told she was incapable of surviving without family supervision.

The pressure didn’t come from strangers, but from her own grandmother, who insisted she abandon her home, her partner, and her independence to return to a cramped apartment and “do things the right way.” Each phone call escalated into panic, tears, and warnings about everything that could go wrong. On social media, readers quickly realized this wasn’t simple worry. The twist lies in how concern slowly unraveled into control, leaving many asking where love ends and manipulation begins.

WIBTA if I told my grandmother she’s the reason I don’t want to “Come home”?

The situation began with a young mother explaining how far she’d come from her upbringing

So essentially, I’m a woman in my 20s with a 3 year old toddler and I’m 7 months pregnant. I grew up in a tiny town in the middle of...

Very little for kids to do as it’s essentially a retirement town. My family is also very low income and barely scraping by. I met my partner 5 years ago,...

He enlisted, we got married, had a baby, moved states, yada yada military life. The problem is my family, specifically my grandmother, won’t accept my life choices.

Anytime he leaves for training, even if it’s only a day or so, she’ll tell me I need to “Come home” because I’m not capable of parenting by myself.

If she calls and I’m at the gas station 5 minutes from my house it’s, “Mongoose, you know I don’t want you out doing any of that alone with your...

Everyday independence became framed as danger and incompetence

Anything could happen and you need to wait until John (my spouse, fake name) is home to take you.” I can’t tell her I’m at the grocery store without her...

ADVERTISEMENT

As the pregnancy advanced, her demands grew more extreme

I’m due in a few months and she wants me to move back home with my toddler and medically fragile dog and deliver there. Leave my husband to take his...

12 hours away completely alone, and live on her couch in her 1 bedroom apartment when I have a whole house with my partner. She’s also raising my two siblings...

ADVERTISEMENT

she tells me we’ll just have to make it work because my husband will be essentially useless. “Men can’t take care of kids” and I need her to help me

She’s also the stereotypical “I raised a bunch of kids, I know better than you.” Type. I’m frustrated. She complains that her marriage fell apart because of family interference

and then the second I do literally anything that is considered adulting, I need to come home. I can’t go to the store, gas station, or even sit outside on...

ADVERTISEMENT

Anytime I say anything about calling a doctor or a vet for my kids/animals she tells me to give her the number because I can’t make phone calls. I’m not...

I’ve lived on my own since I was kicked out by my addict mother at 16. It’s just too late for her to act like this. Like I need an...

I have a fantastic partner figuring everything out with me and her constant “leave him and come home” attitude just isn’t what I want to hear. I want to have...

ADVERTISEMENT

and then posts cryptic Facebook status’s about family. I just don’t know what to do and the hormones aren’t helping me keep it together. Any advice or similar situations would...

Edit just for a little clarification: my grandmother is also extremely disabled and will text me implying it’s an emergency. If I don’t answer, she blows up my partners phone.

If he can’t answer she calls all the relatives/makes a post that I’m missing and then I have 20+ calls from several different people who mean well, they’re just incredibly...

ADVERTISEMENT

Edit 2: So I’ve read all the comments and I really appreciate everyone’s input, the situation is really complicated and I do adore my grandmother, she can just be a...

She called this morning and asked about my partners contract and about him getting out of the military. I told her he was going to re sign when the time...

You’re almost done with all of that nonsense and you can’t let him drag you back in” for the comments asking how she knows where I am and not to...

ADVERTISEMENT

my whole family is in a life 360 chat so they know where I am all the time and I do like seeing where my siblings and younger family are...

A lot of came from the comments here and she didn’t take it well. We’re resigning, end of story. We’re not moving unless we PCS, end of story.

I’m not downgrading my children’s lives to be close to family when they’re arguably one of the craziest bunches of people I’ve ever encountered. Those of you that assumed she...

ADVERTISEMENT

The final confrontation revealed a deeper motive beneath the fear

Once I got everything out, her response was, “I’m getting old, I can’t keep doing this and I know you can’t handle those babies. It’d be easier if you lived...

That’s how it was done back when I was a kid. You’re the only responsible one and Mark (fake name, oldest cousin with all the kids) can’t afford childcare for...

ADVERTISEMENT

You got away from your mom and now you need to get them away before I go, you know how they are (aka failing out of school and just over...

I got out because I did it alone, my siblings lack of effort in life is not my cross to bear. We agreed, more like I insisted, that we not...

I just couldn’t be their savior and they all needed to get it together. This ended with her crying and I had to just hang up, I don’t feel good...

ADVERTISEMENT

but I can’t change them and my family has been made aware via a group chat that I’ve got a lot on my plate and to leave me out of...

Not just a personal crisis they don’t want to deal with. I’m awaiting the call from my mother as it will inevitably come, she has custody of my siblings they...

We’re almost completely no contact as she’s an intense problem and believes that when my grandmother goes (her only source of income) I’m next in line to pay all of...

ADVERTISEMENT

She won’t be happy about my distance because she also “needs me” and thinks my partner has poisoned me against all of them. I won’t answer of course, I never...

She just screams until you give in and give her what she wants/agree with her. The next few days should be interesting. Thank you again for everyone’s input

At its core, this situation reflects a clash between generational expectations and modern independence. The grandmother frames her behavior as protection, yet consistently undermines the poster’s competence as a mother, wife, and adult. From the poster’s side, the frustration is amplified by pregnancy, distance, and a lifetime of having to grow up early.

ADVERTISEMENT

From the grandmother’s perspective, fear likely plays a major role. Aging, disability, and the responsibility of raising multiple children can intensify anxiety. For some older adults, control becomes a way to manage uncertainty. That fear, however, doesn’t excuse dismissing another adult’s autonomy or attempting to sabotage a marriage.

Dr. John Gottman of The Gottman Institute notes, “Healthy relationships are built on trust and respect, not control or criticism.” When concern turns into constant monitoring, it erodes emotional safety and creates resentment rather than closeness.

ADVERTISEMENT

Practical steps matter here. Reducing the flow of information limits opportunities for guilt-driven reactions. Setting predictable check-in times can reassure anxious relatives while protecting mental health. Clear statements like “This decision is final” prevent endless debates. Most importantly, consistency matters. Boundaries only work when followed by action, even when tears or family pressure follow.

Empathy doesn’t require self-sacrifice. The poster can love her grandmother while refusing to play the role of savior. Supporting family does not mean abandoning one’s own children, partner, or stability. In situations like this, calm distance often preserves relationships better than constant emotional firefighting.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Many users supported the poster, praising her strength and independence as a mother

ADVERTISEMENT

[Reddit User] − NTA Your grandmother doesn’t want you to come home. She wants control. You’re a grown adult, a mom and clearly capable

but she’s clinging to this fantasy where you’re helpless without her. It's manipulation disguised as concern. Set your boundaries.

p0rkmaster − This might come as a surprise to you, but the words "We will not be doing that" will not k__l her. Repeat as often as necessary.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sue_Dohnim − NTA. You need to put grandma on an info diet. The less she knows, the less she can use to guilt trip you.

BaffledMum − NTA Info diet. Don't tell her anything about what you're doing--store, porch, walks, anything.

notentirely_fearless − NTA. Stop answering the phone.

ADVERTISEMENT

Others offered more balanced takes, acknowledging anxiety while still urging boundaries

Timely_Egg_6827 − NTA - she's 12 hours away. She is a non=problem except in the way she makes you feel. She won't be getting on a plane to come bother...

She is probably worried about you and got a lot of scenarios running wild in her head. That's not your problem but it might be nice to try and put...

If you can afford it, tell her you've got a cleaner coming in once a day to help in immediate aftermath of the birth so she's reassured you have another...

Don't tell her when you go to the shops. She doesn't need to do. Even if you were attacked, she is helpless to help. Your husband is a lot more...

Say you are getting the toddler into a routine and that you can phone her at 7pm every night. Tell her about your husband's training etc after the fact.

I had to only talk to my Mum once a week because she did all this and it didn't help me at all. It was just another burden.

That is a good boundary to set unless you need the contact. Don't go home. I have a suspicion your Grandmother is sinking under her responsibiities.

And getting you home means two women looking after multiple young children together but she can spin it as you need the help. That is the discussion you need to...

Edit: on the edit about the phone blowing up, I think you are giving her too much credit. Even she has dementia or she's using other people to police you.

She's punishing you by contacting your husband to make him worry about you what is going to happen when he goes on tour (he doesn't need this)

and dragging other people into it. Tell the other people you are an adult, touch base with your husband daily and you'd greatly appreciate it if they'd stop feeding into...

If want to make a point, tell them they are endangering you by expecting a instant response and distracting you from your child.

You are 12 hours away you can't help in an emergency. So alternative is listen, hang up, send one of the paranoid people round to help and repeat.

Any-Research-8140 − Sometimes senior dementia begins to manifest in the form of heightened anxiety. None of this sounds super rational. Agree on the info diet. Check in less regularly and...

EmceeSuzy − Do you have any idea why you are still talking on the phone with her beyond a polite check-in once or twice a month?

AssumptionAromatic38 − NTA. It's time to set boundaries clear.

b00kbat − NTA. You’re grown, you live on your own 12 hours away, you can just not answer her calls when you know she’s looking to stir up some drama,...

I definitely understand the feeling of needing to be respectful and listen to her advice, but as you say in your post, you’ve lived on your own since you were...

A few comments leaned lighter, using blunt honesty to cut through the tension

FAYCSB − 1. Don’t give her information about where you are or what you’re doing. Don’t pick up if you’re out. 2. Block her on Facebook so you don’t have...

[Reddit User] − “Grandma I know this comes from a place of love- but I am a mother, wife and adult now. I am not open to unsolicited advice.

My husband and I will be parenting TOGETHER. While I know that’s different from your generation I need you to respect me and my choices.

If you continue to challenge me and belittle me as an adult in my own right when I share things with you I won’t be sharing about my life. If...

Again I know it comes from love and thank you for worrying about me- but I’m 7 months pregnant with my second child and I need calm and support right...

ItsJoanNotJoAnn − Time to have an adult conversation with granny. 1. I'm an adult, already have one child so I pretty much know what I'm doing.

2. Why would I want to come home and sleep on your couch in an overcrowded apartment? 3. Granny, you said your marriage broke up due to family interference. You're...

4. I don't need you to keep tabs on me 24/7 nor do I need a male to 'come get me' while I'm doing normal things a grown married woman...

5. You **must** respect my boundaries and stop the constant crying and interfering. As hard as it is for you accept, I'm blocking you temporarily on Facebook and on my...

Your future actions will dictate how many times you get blocked. Yes, this seems harsh, but which is harsher, listening and obeying her or the breakup of your marriage?

vega2306 − NTA but it’s time for you to be the adult you are stating you are and put your grandma on an information diet. No “It’s hard, I’ll feel...

She is blatantly disrespectful, refuses to let you grow up in her mind, and talking accomplishes nothing. Stop telling her so much, and every time she starts her non-sense, end...

Spinnerofyarn − NTA. If it were me, I'd do the following things: 1. Tell all your relatives that you love Grandma, but you are no longer keeping her in the...

and because she's cried wolf so many times about emergencies, you're drastically reducing contact. If there's an emergency on your end, they will be contacted by either your husband or...

If Grandma sends out the bat signal saying you must be reached/found/helped, ignore it. Then put Grandma on an information diet. If anybody does follow Grandma's lead

and tries to track you down on Grandma's behest, you'll start ignoring their calls. They are only to call you about Grandma's "emergencies" if Grandma is hospitalized. 2. Don't tell...

Put her on what's called an information diet, meaning you give her very little information and zero details. "I'm fine. I'm at home. "

Don't tell her where you go, what you eat, what you're doing, what the doctor says or anything that she will typically question. If she asks about your child/ren "Everything's...

"Grandma, we've discussed this multiple times. It's not happening. I know you love me and I love you but I am done with this conversation and if you try to...

Do not ever say, "Grandma, you need to stop" and continue talking. You say, "Grandma, I told you I wouldn't listen to this from you any more. Goodbye. " Then...

It doesn't matter if you tell her you told her not to do it and she goes with, "Ok, I'll stop, I just love you and worry about you. "

No, you hang up. Actions have consequences and if she gets hysterical or worked up over it, she cries, whatever, that's her choice. YOU aren't doing anything to her. What...

Don't fall for any guilt trip she or anyone else lays on her. I bet someone's going to say you shouldn't do this and "It's just how she is. "...

This story highlights how love can become suffocating when fear turns into control. A young mother chose stability, partnership, and independence, only to face relentless pressure from family who refused to see her as capable. While concern can come from genuine emotion, it doesn’t justify undermining another adult’s life. In the end, boundaries became the only path forward. What would you do if someone you loved couldn’t respect your choices?

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *