AITA for refusing to let my MIL feed my baby?
A new mother is exhausted from her mother-in-law’s constant overstepping. The MIL visits unannounced, passive-aggressively complains about food portions, and repeatedly demands to bottle-feed the exclusively breastfed 5-month-old—despite being told no multiple times. The mother refuses to pump just to satisfy her MIL, as breastfeeding is quicker and more comfortable for both her and the baby.
The tension boiled over when the MIL showed up uninvited again, made snide remarks about dinner, and insisted the mother pump so she could feed the baby. Frustrated, the mother slammed the spatula, told her MIL she’d never feed the child, and threatened no contact. The MIL stormed out, the husband kicked her out but then turned on his wife, calling her childish for not pumping “just once.” Now the husband is distant, and the mother wonders if she was wrong for standing her ground.

‘AITA for refusing to let my MIL feed my baby?’
The MIL constantly oversteps boundaries:




The latest incident escalated:







The aftermath:










This situation reveals serious boundary violations by the MIL and a husband who fails to enforce them consistently. The MIL’s fixation on bottle-feeding and diaper-changing is concerning—especially the creepy extended diaper change that made both parents uncomfortable. Her uninvited visits, passive-aggressive food comments, and repeated demands to pump ignore the mother’s autonomy over her body and the baby’s feeding routine.
Breastfeeding is a deeply personal choice. Pumping is time-consuming, painful, and unnecessary here. Suggesting the mother interrupt cooking to pump so the MIL can feed is selfish and entitled. The MIL isn’t entitled to “bond” by feeding the baby—bonding happens through holding, talking, and play.
The husband’s outburst—calling his wife and mother “children” and blaming her for not pumping—shows misplaced anger. He should direct frustration at his mother for boundary violations, not his wife for protecting her comfort and the baby’s routine. His apology and no-contact decision are positive, but his distance suggests unresolved resentment.
Lactation consultant Dr. Jack Newman notes: “Mothers should never feel pressured to pump solely for others’ convenience. Breastfeeding is the baby’s right, and pumping is a medical tool—not entertainment for grandparents.”
Practical advice: Reinforce boundaries—no uninvited visits, no feeding without permission. Consider low/no-contact with MIL if she won’t respect rules. Couples counseling can help the husband process his frustration and support his wife fully. The mother was right to stand firm—her body, her baby, her rules.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
The online community overwhelmingly supported the OP as NTA, praising her for setting firm boundaries and criticizing the MIL’s entitlement and the husband’s misplaced anger. Many urged stronger consequences for the MIL.
Most agreed the mother’s body and baby’s feeding are non-negotiable:

















This story shows how quickly family boundaries can be tested by an entitled in-law. The mother was right to refuse pumping and feeding her baby to satisfy her MIL—breastfeeding is her choice, and no one is entitled to interfere. The MIL’s uninvited visits and passive-aggressive behavior only worsened the situation.
What do you think? Have you dealt with an overstepping in-law? How do you enforce breastfeeding boundaries? Share your experiences in the comments—we’d love to hear!
