AITA for planning a trip during my SIL’s due date??

A 32-year-old woman is caught in a family tug-of-war: her mom surprised her with a dream mother-daughter trip to London in April—her first ever with Mom, timed for her birthday. The only hitch? It falls during the week her sister-in-law is due with her first baby. The two women have never been close—SIL is openly unfriendly and only tolerates her because of her brother (the husband).

When she excitedly told her husband, he shut it down hard: she “can’t go” because family should be there for the birth, pointing out that SIL visited them in the hospital after their own child was born last year. She fired back that SIL doesn’t even like her, hospital visits for newborns are short anyway, and she can meet the baby when she returns (they all live in the same city). He called her rude and unreasonable; she thinks it’s a weak excuse to derail a special, non-refundable gift. The online community overwhelmingly backed her up, telling her to go enjoy the trip and questioning her husband’s priorities.

‘AITA for planning a trip during my SIL’s due date??’

The tension stems from a strained relationship with SIL:

SIL [30F] & I [32F] are not close & never have been. She’s never been friendly towards me & only gives me the time of day because she worships the...

Anyways, she’s due with her first baby in April of next year. My mom just surprised me with a trip to London that same month for my birthday, our first...

When she shared the exciting news, the reaction was unexpected:

When I told my husband, I wasn’t expecting his reaction. He said I can’t go because our trip falls on the same week as my SIL’s due date. I said...

Husband said that’s not the point, because she came to the hospital when we had our first child last year. I said yes, but had she been traveling when I...

I told him I can meet the baby when I return home (we all live in the same city- I see his family all the time). He says I’m being...

I argue it’s a lame excuse for me to cancel, or completely rearrange, my trip. Pretty sure the flights are non-refundable too.. AITA in this scenario??

This conflict highlights a common family dynamic: differing expectations around “family duty” during major life events like births. The husband views attendance (or availability) as a non-negotiable show of support, especially since SIL showed up for their child’s birth. For him, it’s about reciprocity and being present for his sister. But the wife sees it differently—SIL’s lack of warmth toward her means no real emotional bond, so her physical presence isn’t meaningful or expected.

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Due dates are notoriously unreliable (babies arrive anywhere from 37–42 weeks, often early or late), and modern hospital births prioritize privacy for the new parents and baby bonding. Crowds in labor/delivery aren’t welcomed by most women, and early postpartum visits are brief to avoid germ exposure to newborns. Canceling a rare, sentimental mother-daughter trip for a low-odds chance of overlapping exactly with birth feels disproportionate, especially with non-refundable plans.

Dr. John Gottman, a leading relationship researcher, emphasizes that healthy partnerships involve “turning toward” bids for connection (like sharing excitement about a trip) rather than shutting them down. Here, the husband’s immediate veto dismissed her joy and autonomy, potentially breeding resentment. Family-of-origin loyalty can create blind spots—husbands sometimes prioritize siblings over spouses if unresolved patterns exist.

Practical advice: Have a calm conversation framing it as “I want to support your family, but this trip is a once-in-a-lifetime gift from my mom. Let’s plan how you’ll handle things if the baby comes early.” Suggest FaceTiming from London, bringing a special London gift for the baby, and visiting immediately upon return. If he insists on veto power, explore why—perhaps guilt over SIL’s feelings or fear of conflict with his family. Couples counseling can help balance in-law obligations with marital partnership. Ultimately, she isn’t obligated to rearrange her life around someone who doesn’t value her presence.

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Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

The community overwhelmingly supported the wife, calling her NTA and urging her to enjoy the trip without guilt.

Most dismissed the due-date conflict as overblown and questioned the husband’s motives:

"Homeboat199 − NTA. Due dates are rarely accurate and your mom did a really great thing! !! So you're supposed to disappoint your mom for someone who doesn't even want...

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"OutcomeMysterious281 − My obgyn planned a trip the week of my due date and I wasn’t mad. NTA"

"IamIrene − He said I can’t go because our trip falls on the same week as my SIL’s due date. So. ..your husband is dictating to you and now you...

Chances are she won't have it exactly on her due date. And I wonder how he'd feel if you tried to dictate to him in the same way. I think...

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"[Reddit User] − NTA go on the trip who cares about her due date"

"fiestafan73 − WTF does he think you're going to do at the hospital with your sister? Be there with a catcher's mitt? Literally no woman in labor wants a crowd...

"checkers709 − NTA I guess I kind of understand that family is important to your husband, but most newborn hospital visits are only a few hours long anyway [...]

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You wouldn’t be the AH if you went on the trip. [...] The baby will still be there when you get back and mom + baby might be a little...

"ComparisonFlashy8522 − NTA Tell you SIL about the trip and say you'll face time her in the hospital and bring back a lovely present for baby from London.

Guaranteed she won't bat an eyelash and the wind will be taken out of hubby's sails. I suspect he's mostly miffed because he doesn't want to be doing solo dad...

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"faxmachine13 − NTA oh hell no, and if that’s the kind of “boundaries” he has, then it’s no wonder she treats you poorly, she’s able to get away with it!"

"Narrow_Yard7199 − NTA, you aren’t close and it isn’t your kid. I’m close to my siblings and wouldn’t give it a second thought to travel when they are due with...

"Shichimi88 − Nta. Go on your trip. You have a husband problem."

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"1962Michael − NTA. Your husband needs to back the f up. You're allowed to accept a birthday trip from your mother. Period. Full stop. [...] PS Just curious.

Do you think she's petty enough to plan her child's birth to overshadow your birthday? For his birthday party to take precedence over yours for the next 20+ years?"

""GirlDad2023_

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""Successful-Weird-185

""Round_Warthog1990

""dart1126

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This situation shows how family expectations can clash with personal joy—especially when one spouse feels pulled toward their sibling while the other prioritizes a rare bonding opportunity with their own parent. Due dates aren’t guarantees, hospital births aren’t social events, and non-refundable plans deserve respect. The community agrees: go enjoy London with your mom.

Have you ever had to choose between family obligations and a special personal trip? How did you handle the pressure? Share below—your story might help someone else facing the same dilemma.

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