AITAH for telling my brother-in-law to always assume I don’t want his parenting advice?

Family vacations are supposed to be easygoing, full of shared meals and relaxed moments that bring everyone closer. For one father, however, a single dinner at a resort buffet turned into an unexpectedly tense exchange that lingered long after the plates were cleared. What began as a few simple instructions to his kids quickly became a public critique of his parenting style.

The situation struck a nerve with readers across social media because it touched on something deeply familiar: the fine line between casual commentary and unwanted advice, especially when it comes from family. As the comments rolled in, people weighed in on respect, boundaries, and whether speaking up in the moment was justified. The reactions ranged from firm support to amused disbelief, all circling the same question—when does advice cross the line?

AITAH for telling my brother-in-law to always assume I don't want his parenting advice?

The vacation dinner started calmly, with one parent trying to keep things orderly

We are on a family vacation right now. Me, my wife, our kids, her parents, her sister, her brother, his wife and their kids. The resort we are staying at...

As we were walking to the buffet from our table I told the kids to only get one plate at a time and not to over pile it with food,...

My brother-in-law made a comment that I "even have rules for the buffet." He said to his kids "don't worry. You don't have to follow Uncle OP's rules. You're on...

At the table, the commentary continued, this time aimed directly at the children

At the table he saw that my oldest got a huge piece of salmon and that he had scooped green beans on top of the salmon. It wasn't a mountain...

It just wasn't carefully separated. My brother-in-law said "don't let OP see that. What if a green bean rolls off?" I told my son to ignore him and enjoy his...

My brother-in-law said "that's the key to raising happy kids. You should want them to enjoy life. It's hard to enjoy anything when there are a million rules."

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Finally, the response came—clear, direct, and impossible to miss

I told him I don't want parenting advice from him while I'm trying to enjoy my meal. He said he didn't realize he was bothering me and asked when he...

I said "go ahead and assume I never want parenting advice from you." My mother-in-law said to my wife "your husband is in a mood, huh? I hope he isn't...

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That was the end of it. No one commented further. Was I out of line to say that? I think my response was proportional to his statements.

I don't want his advice, and I would prefer he didn't give it. I also don't approve of his parenting, but I don't say so. I would like the same...

Situations like this often escalate because they mix two sensitive areas: parenting choices and public settings. The father’s original request was straightforward and focused on safety and courtesy, yet it was treated as something rigid or joyless. From his perspective, the repeated remarks felt dismissive, especially when delivered in front of his children, which can easily undermine authority and trust.

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Looking at the brother-in-law’s side, he may see himself as relaxed and well-meaning, believing fewer rules equal happier kids. Some parents genuinely feel that vacations are a break from structure, and he might not have realized how sharp his comments sounded. Still, intent does not erase impact, particularly when advice is given without being asked and framed as sarcasm.

Psychologist Dr. John Gottman from The Gottman Institute has noted, “How parents support each other’s authority in front of children matters more than any single rule they enforce.” This idea applies beyond couples and into extended family dynamics. When adults contradict one another openly, kids notice, and it can create confusion rather than freedom.

A practical approach in these moments is calm, private communication. Addressing concerns away from the table preserves dignity for everyone involved. For the future, setting expectations before group trips—what’s okay to comment on and what isn’t—can prevent similar clashes. Clear boundaries, stated once and reinforced calmly, often do more to keep the peace than biting humor or silence.

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Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many users backed the father, saying the comments crossed a clear line

Vdavwil − NTA It's always rude to directly contradict a parent when they are instructing their kids. If he really had a concern (he didn't, he just wanted to bust...

Impressive-Fig1876 − NTA sounds like this guy is an AH all the time and you’re just less accepting of it on vacation. Good for you

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Fit-Bumblebee-6420 − He's the loud and everyone should accept him for who he is type of guy, huh? You are fine. Kids thrive with rules so they don't hurt themselves

and actually enjoy vacation knowing what boundaries are already in place. Your MIL needs to mind her business too. NTA but avoid this one because he will want to prove...

abbriggs22 − Parents not setting rules and boundaries is the reason there are so many intitled brats running around. Kudos to you. ..

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Active-Ad-2527 − NTA. You're also teaching your kids not to waste food

Others tried to balance both sides while still acknowledging the frustration

Resident-Respond6566 − Teaching manners and etiquette helps a kid out in the long run. Not sure they are rules but more like care for others, like those that need to...

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formerpe − NTA. You should only provide advice when someone asks you for advice. Unsolicited advice is most times received as criticism, isn't at all helpful as it isn't received...

BulbasaurRanch − I’d end up stopping travelling with these people. I couldn’t hold my tongue, I would’ve shut down that imbecile and said something about MIL making dumb comments too.

YouSayWotNow − NTA He was rude to make comments on your parental instructions to your kids, especially such sensible and non-onerous ones.

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He clearly gets pleasure out of putting you down even when it's over small-fry such as this example. Didn't your wife have anything to say to her brother and other...

Foresakeandbake − NTA you tried to not engage but there comes a limit. Also why were you “in a mood” instead of BIL being in the wrong? You need to...

A few commenters added humor and blunt honesty to lighten the mood

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destro23 − NTA What a schmuck this guy is. I'd have told him "gay kocken offen yom".

Alarmed-Speaker-8330 − You’re more polite than I would have been. Let me guess, he’s the golden child. What a bully.

ExtremeJujoo − NTA The BIL is a rude twatwaffle. You said the right thing. MIL can p__s off too. Let me guess, they are permissive parents, always the “friend/bff” to...

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If so, tell them research shows that permissive parenting is awful and causes kids to be anxiety riddled a-holes with zero concept of boundaries, unable to function properly in society....

Quirky_Anything_1209 − Why is it that when someone makes rude remarks, the person being offended isn’t allowed to say anything without becoming the jerk? NTA

Beautiful_Delivery77 − NTA that was about as polite as you could be with someone forcing unwanted parenting advice on you and directing snarky comments undermining you directly at your kids.

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Even worse that is was coming from someone whose parenting you actively do not respect. Saying this stuff to you is bad enough but undermining you directly to your kids...

In the end, this family dinner wasn’t really about buffet plates or green beans. It was about respect, timing, and knowing when to keep opinions to yourself. The father drew a clear line after feeling repeatedly undermined, while others saw the moment as an overreaction to casual remarks. Both views reveal how easily small comments can snowball in close-knit settings. So what do you think—was setting that boundary necessary, or could it have been handled differently?

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