AITA for not allowing my MIL access to my son anymore?
A 26-year-old new mom and her 24-year-old husband allowed the MIL (47) into the delivery room and NICU during a traumatic birth – losing over a liter of blood, C-section, solo recovery while husband returned to work. MIL posted performative Facebook love declarations but rarely visited, made minimal effort, and openly favored her other two grandchildren (regular parties, sleepovers) while claiming she “didn’t have the capacity” for this grandson.
After 8 months of coincidental run-ins and no real relationship, the couple is done. The son doesn’t know her, and they won’t force a one-sided bond. Now MIL will likely demand to sit together at the Canada Day parade, but they plan to decline all invites. Is protecting their son from inconsistent, performative love making them the assholes?

‘AITA for not allowing my MIL access to my son anymore?’
The birth was traumatic and MIL was present:

Postpartum neglect and performative social media:


Favoritism became obvious:



The “capacity” excuse and party snub:






Grandparental favoritism seriously damages children’s emotions – studies (e.g., from the Journal of Family Psychology) show that grandchildren who feel less loved have lower self-esteem, anxiety, and resentment toward more loved cousins or grandparents. At 8 months old, the poster’s son won’t remember, but as he enters the toddler stage, he will notice the difference in attention, gifts, and time – and tell himself: “I don’t deserve it.”
The poster’s mother-in-law’s behavior is typical of hypocritical grandparents: posting on Facebook to garner likes/sympathy, making minimal real effort, and making excuses (“no time,” “sick”) when asked. This isn’t harmless inconsistency; it’s emotional neglect disguised as love. Allowing continued contact risks making the poster’s son feel like a second child in his own family as he grows up – a wound that could last into adulthood.
The decision to end contact is to protect the child and is the right thing to do. Grandparents don’t have automatic rights over their grandchildren; contact is a privilege earned through genuine and consistent care. Cutting off contact (or limiting it to important public events) will help the OP’s son avoid repeated rejection. This also helps protect the poster and her husband from constant stress and manipulation.
If the poster considers limiting contact, set strict rules: no posting photos without permission, no comparing the children, a prompt response when asked, and consistent effort (frequent visits, calls, interaction). But after eight months of virtually no involvement, complete lack of contact until (if) she proves a real change is the best course of action. The poster’s son deserves the presence of adults – not just people acting for the cameras.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
The Reddit community overwhelmingly supported the OP as NTA – praising the boundary-setting and warning about long-term emotional damage from favoritism:

























![[Reddit User] − NTA, just dont tell her. She hasnt been kind or helpful, so what do you owe her? Not a freaking thing thats what. I also allowed my...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768555356858-26.webp)








This isn’t just about one skipped party or a few missed visits—it’s about a grandmother who only seems to care when there’s an audience to impress. The parents chose to shield their son from that inconsistency, and most people agree it’s the right call.
What would you do in their shoes? Give her one last chance, go full no-contact, or something in between? Drop your thoughts below—we’re reading every one.
