AITAH for getting my surgery even though it means that my daughter will be out hundreds of dollars and may lose her job?

A devoted grandmother faces a heart-wrenching choice: proceed with essential foot surgery that will temporarily leave her unable to drive her grandchildren to school, potentially costing her single-mom daughter unpaid leave or even her job. For years, she’s been the reliable daily support, stepping in without hesitation for drop-offs and more.

What deepens the emotional conflict is the guilt of prioritizing her own health after a lifetime of putting family first, versus enabling her adult daughter’s heavy reliance on free, constant childcare. With surgery timed ideally before winter, the question becomes whether self-care makes her a bad mom and grandma.

‘AITAH for getting my surgery even though it means that my daughter will be out hundreds of dollars and may lose her job?’

The close-knit family dynamic relies heavily on the grandmother’s daily involvement with her grandchildren.

My daughter (26f) is a single mom of two beautiful kids (5m and 3f). We are very close- literally. She lives about a hundred yards away in the same complex....

It is my responsibility to get my grandson to kindergarten every morning and to get my granddaughter to her talk&learn at the local school on Mondays and Wednesdays.

A torn Achilles tendon requires surgery, limiting mobility and ending temporary driving ability.

Now for my problem. I need surgery on my foot. I tore my Achilles tendon and now they have to go in and fix it. I have a boot I...

After the surgery, however, I will be non weight-bearing for 3 weeks. I won't be able to get either child to school. My daughter has to be at work at...

She can't go in late because she is the opener. She has been considering taking a leave of absence for personal reasons but can't because she can't afford to be...

Family and friends urge prioritizing health, while guilt weighs heavily on the decision.

My friends and husband (not her father) think that for once in her life I need to put my needs first and let her figure things out for herself. I...

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Feel like a bad mom and Nana. My surgery is scheduled for November 8th. That gives me enough time in the boot before the snow flies. It's perfect timing for...

EDIT: Much to my relief it seems that y'all feel I'm not the AH. I'm going ahead with my scheduled surgery with a lot of good tips and info on...

Popular opinion is that I shouldn't "set myself on fire to keep someone else warm". I guess I do that a lot. Thank you all so much! I look forward...

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Grandparents often become vital safety nets for single parents, but over-reliance can blur boundaries and delay independence. The grandmother’s generosity enabled her daughter’s work while providing free, dependable childcare—a huge gift, not an obligation. Delaying surgery risks worsening the injury, longer recovery, or permanent issues, especially at 50 when healing slows.

Three weeks non-weight-bearing is standard, but full recovery often spans months, making timing critical before winter hazards. Opposing feelings stem from guilt over disrupting routines, yet adult children must develop backups for illnesses, emergencies, or life changes. Enabling constant dependence hinders growth; this forces necessary planning.

Societally, women especially sacrifice health for family, but self-care models strength—surgery prevents future limitations that could reduce long-term help. Open talks about alternatives reinforce support without resentment.

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See what others had to share with OP:

Many users firmly declared the grandmother NTA, stressing her health comes first and the daughter needs backups.

[Reddit User] − NTA- you need to get the surgery before it gets worse and to be pain free. Your daughter is an adult and has enough time to make...

You need the time to rest and heal. I’m saying this as a single Mom of a young child do absolutely understand the pressures your daughter has.

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But I never allow it to impact my parents’ health or them going on vacations. She can ask her boss to adjust her hours by 1 hour, ask a neighbour/friend/family...

Scary-Common499 − Is this actually a real question? If it is I’m seriously wondering if you should rather go for brain surgery.

Three weeks versus possible immobility. Friends and family are the way to go. Her children , her responsibility first, the fact that you help is a bonus, not a given.

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DJ4116 − I’m not understanding what her predicament has to do with you Lol. Surgical correction of your foot is necessary,

Your daughter should be responsible for getting *her* kids to school and *herself* to work. Don’t forget…she’s grown NTA

No-Yesterday-5822 − NAH you need surgery and she will need help. No reason you two cant work together to get things covered. However, your going to need coverage for more...

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3 weeks non-weight bearing does not mean you will be walking in 3 weeks. If everything goes as it should, 3 weeks you will be able to slowly add weight...

Again, if everything goes right, your looking at 3 months before your walking normally. With snow and icy Conditions, you need to be extra careful not to re-injur yourself. While...

If offered, take the nerve block. It makes the first 2 days bearable. Most surgeons will call in you meds the day before so your caretaker doesn't have to scramble...

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Talk to Dr about the best was to alternate meds for better coverage/least pills. I can explain that more if you want.

Ask about compression socks to keep swelling down and keep your boot from getting stinky. I have more but feeling like I am sending a wall of text LOL good...

A couple of commenters provided medical insights and realistic recovery expectations.

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No_Astronaut2795 − You can't put off an important surgery for this. She does need to figure out alternative care and you don't need to feel guilty.

She has time to figure something out. It sucks for your daughter but she relies too heavily on you.

Vaultmd − The real question is: What is your daughter going to do to help you while you’re laid up?

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Crafty_Cha0s_ − FYI Achilles’ tendon repairs take about 4-6 months to heal initially and that’s not even talking about weight bearing status or therapy and driving. You NEED to have...

She can find someone else in the meantime to take her kids to school or she could always try and arrange something with her boss. The longer you put this...

I know this, as I’m an orthopedic nurse who helps fix Achilles’ commonly. She can figure something else out in the mean time. You need to put your health first....

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Some users added blunt or questioning takes to emphasize parental responsibility.

SaltyDangerHands − It is my responsibility to get my grandson to kindergarten every morning and to get my granddaughter to her talk&learn at the local school on Mondays and Wednesdays.

No it isn't. NTA. You have literally no responsibility here and everything you've done has been a generous act. It's great that you want to help out, awesome, but you're...

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You're not getting an ass-lift. You have a (bad) injury and you're treating it so as not to be in pain and crippled for the rest of your life. This...

Your kid has kids, she has responsibilities, you're very nice to help out where you can, but you gotta look out for your literal health and your messed-up leg.

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EKGEMS − Hell no, you are not the AH at all. Your daughter needed a backup plan just in case for childcare. SHE is the parent and it falls on...

Please do not let yourself go back to being too active too early. You will need to rest, take your pain medication and allow yourself to heal

Smarterthntheavgbear − My next door neighbor put off the same surgery,, it's been an ongoing issue because she waited so long (doesn't like doctors/hospitals).

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Her doctor told her that he had to do more extensive correction because of scar tissue buildup. WHEN does your daughter think is the more appropriate time? Next summer? Wouldn't...

There will NEVER be a good time. Also, does your daughter not care about your pain? NTA and realize that at your (and my) age, we start having issues with...

This grandmother’s surgery dilemma reveals the fine line between generous family support and unintentional over-dependence, where prioritizing personal health feels selfish after years of selflessness. Overwhelming consensus affirms proceeding protects long-term ability to help while pushing the daughter toward sustainable solutions.

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As a grandparent, where do you draw the line on daily childcare—always available or with limits? Have you delayed medical needs for family obligations, and how did it turn out?

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