AITA for telling my DIL/son that I didn’t want you there so I didn’t invite you and I will not be doing invites that I don’t mean?

A mother-in-law just unleashed a storm of family drama after bluntly telling her daughter-in-law she wasn’t wanted on a camping getaway. Years of frustration boiled over, all tied to what she describes as Amy’s extreme sensitivity that leaves everyone tiptoeing around her feelings. From breaking down over minor scrapes to tearing up about long-ago stories, these moments turned casual hangouts into high-alert situations.

The tension isn’t one-sided – her own daughters share the exhaustion, but attempts to address it with her son go nowhere. When plans for a small, women-only trip slipped out during a casual visit, Amy’s quiet question about the exclusion ignited a fierce confrontation. Raw honesty clashed with hurt feelings, leaving the family divided.

‘AITA for telling my DIL/son that I didn’t want you there so I didn’t invite you and I will not be doing invites that I don’t mean?’

Things kicked off with the mother-in-law’s growing irritation toward her daughter-in-law Amy, who comes across as extremely sensitive and quick to tears over minor issues:

I am very annoyed. I have two DIL and this is about Amy. Amy is very sensitive in my opinion. This isn’t always a bad thing but their have been...

She started crying when I informed her my childhood dog (over 40 years ago)was dead. For this reason my son is extremely protective over her. The outdoors are also not...

She is clumsy which usually results in her falling and getting hurt. The worst case was when she fell and scrapped her knee nd start bawling. I truly thought someone...

It was a scrapped knee. Instead of it feeling like an adult relationship, it feels like I have to babysit her all the time. Not mention waking on eggshells or...

My two daughters also have feel this way and when we bring it up my son will not entertain the conversation. I don’t know what’s going on with her but...

Fed up with those experiences, she planned a camping trip inviting only her other daughter-in-law and her own daughters, deliberately leaving Amy out:

So I am planning at camping trip and I invited my other DIL and my daughters. The reasons above I didn’t invite Amy. I also believe not everyone has to...

The trip is next weekend, they came over to pick up the kids and asked me babysit next week. I turned it down since I will be gone. They learned...

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I told her this was just a trip with them. She got quiet and my son got pissed and told me I should have invited her. I reiterate this wasn’t...

I told both of them I don’t invite her since I didn’t want her there. I will not being giving invites to someone I don’t want at the event. You...

and they both need to be an adults and understand. If they can’t get that through their heads then I will bring up every family vacation they took where I...

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At its heart, this situation highlights the strain that mismatched emotional needs can place on family bonds. The mother-in-law describes feeling perpetually on guard, treating interactions like childcare rather than equal adult exchanges. Amy’s reactions – intense tears over small triggers – suggest possible underlying anxiety or emotional dysregulation, which can exhaust those around her without intent to manipulate.

Her son’s fierce protectiveness adds another layer, shutting down discussions and enabling the cycle to continue. This dynamic often leaves extended family members resentful, as valid concerns get dismissed to avoid conflict.

On the flip side, the blunt declaration of exclusion carries real risk of permanent damage. Even justified boundaries can be expressed with more tact to preserve relationships, especially involving grandchildren. Society increasingly recognizes mental health challenges, urging compassion, yet no one is required to sacrifice their own comfort indefinitely.

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Clinical psychologist Lori Gottlieb, in interviews about her book “Maybe You Should Talk to Someone,” has observed how vulnerability can sometimes become a tool – consciously or not – to steer dynamics, though others aren’t obligated to accommodate it forever (source: The Atlantic). Professional support could help Amy build resilience.

Ultimately, practical steps forward include private conversations focused on personal impact rather than character judgments, or suggesting tailored activities that suit everyone’s comfort levels. Curating smaller gatherings is a healthy choice; the key lies in balancing honesty with kindness to avoid unnecessary bridges burned.

See what others had to share with OP:

Online reactions poured in quickly, with the majority firmly backing the mother-in-law’s right to choose her companions for the trip:

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Plenty showed full support, painting Amy as a vibe-killer who’d ruin the fun.

Adorable_Strength319 - NTA. I think you’re getting a lot of Y T As bc you wrote this when you were annoyed and it really comes through. You did try to...

Maybe it would have gone over better if you’d told her you thought she wouldn’t enjoy the rough nature of camping and given her some examples of stuff she wouldn’t...

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But she might have also brushed that off and pretended it wouldn’t bother her to force you into including her then acting like a delicate princess for the weekend. She...

BulbasaurRanch - NTA Her presence obviously dampens the mood for everyone. You shouldn’t have to sacrifice the potential for this trip to spare her feelings.

You’re right in that you don’t have to include everyone is every outing/trip. However, it doesn’t seem like you handled the conversation the best way. But in the end her...

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KronkLaSworda - NTA Nobody wants to go camping, or anywhere really, with a Debbie Downer.

MoetNChandon - NTA. Sounds like Amy needs to grow up. She is entitled and it seems as if she brings tears into the fray she will get what she wants....

She is not a child, she is a grown woman and an adult. She needs to start acting like one.

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groovymama98 - Nta I wasn't there, so I don't know for sure, but it does sound like you were pushed into telling the unwanted truth. I tell my kids everyone...

and we all deal with them in our way. But we can't expect everyone else to coddle us. We have to learn to put things aside because the world will...

completedett - NTA She sounds exhausting.

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The_final_frontier_ - Amy sounds awful to be around. NTA

[Reddit User] - Nta. You don’t have to include her in everything when it’s like taking on the responsibility of a small child. Her reaction to not being invited is...

Lullayable - NTA. If it's truly like you say, then there's obviously something a bit wrong with Amy. If your son wants to baby her, that's his choice and it...

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You shouldn't be expected to follow his lead. You've expressed your issues to your son, it seems on multiple occasions. And it doesn't seem to have ever been addressed.

You're not asking her to change, but you also don't have to cater every event to her preferences. I think it was a fair decision.

Others pushed back on the approach, agreeing with the exclusion but slamming the bluntness:

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BrainsBeautyBrawn - ESH. Your DIL does not need to be invited to everything you do. Not every event is suited for every person in the family. However, you were AH...

When you had told them about the trip and DIL asked why she wasn’t invited, you could have said something like you were under the impression that she wouldn’t be...

Or you could express concern that you had seen her get injured so easily around the home, you didn’t want to put her in a position that would likely end...

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There were ways you could have softened the blow, but instead you basically told her straight up you just didn’t want her around.

Which while it might be true, can also be hurtful and will definitely damage your relationship with her and your son. I think they overreacted, but you also didn’t handle...

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Pennylane19XX - I can see why you wouldn’t want her around. But also, who ASKS why they’re not invited to something? That’s just asking someone to hurt your feelings.

Hanxa13 - ESH - you are completely in your right not to invite her, absolutely, but how you went about explaining it was awful. 'I'm sorry.

I know you are not a fan of camping and figured we could do something more suited to your taste another time - you wouldn't enjoy this' or words to...

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Provide examples if you must and if you want to maintain a relationship, book a spa day or something that she will like where she can relax and not get...

Give her an hour or two of your time when you feel able to (other than being the free babysitter). But she and your son also suck for pushing it....

Yes, it sucks being excluded, but by pushing the way they did there is a sea of hurt feelings. She definitely needs help if she can't handle even the smallest...

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I will say, you also come across as very very judgy here which isn't helping. It's not fair to lord babysitting over their heads as a 'they won't cut me...

coffeemom23 - Honestly, YTA. You're N T A for not inviting her, Amy sounds like a handful and you're right, you're not obligated to invite her. But saying "I didn't...

It may be the truth, but assuming you want to continue to have a relationship with your son and his family, you can't just be openly hostile to his wife,...

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You could have found any number of more tactful ways to explain not including her, you deliberately chose the most combative one because it sounds like you just don't like...

ETA: To those insisting OP was forced to be rude because they kept asking, I'm not convinced OP is a reliable narrator.

The whole post is brimming with contempt for her DIL, and OP's comments about how son and DIL would never go low-contact because they rely on her too much are...

A few tossed in humor or warnings about fallout:

Dangerous-Pay-128 - Y'all would have no issue with this if the roles were reversed and the MIL wasn't invited. If MIL kept going on about why she wasn't invited, y'all...

Dlraetz1 - You have every right to invite whoever you want to your outing. That said, I anticipate a Reddit in 3 months entitled, ‘My son went No Contact and...

Most voices online agree that nobody owes an invitation to every single event, particularly when someone’s presence consistently shifts the vibe or adds stress. Exclusion doesn’t automatically make someone cruel – it’s often about protecting personal enjoyment.

Still, the way truth gets delivered can leave lasting scars, potentially fracturing family ties that are hard to mend. These clashes remind us how emotional differences can quietly build until they explode. So, where do you land? Is unfiltered honesty the best policy here, or would a gentler sidestep have kept the peace without compromising boundaries?

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