Can’t be in the delivery room? Fine I’ll call the mental health team on you
What would you do if the one person you expected to offer unconditional support during the most vulnerable and life-threatening moment of your pregnancy instead turned it into a terrifying power struggle?
Many expectant mothers set clear boundaries around birth to protect their health and peace, but some family members refuse to respect them. This mother’s story shows how far one person went after being denied access to the maternity ward — calling for a mental health welfare check and accusing her of being a danger to her own baby. It highlights the extreme stress of high-risk pregnancy and the courage it takes to enforce limits.

‘Can’t be in the delivery room? Fine I’ll call the mental health team on you’
The story begins with a high-risk pregnancy that quickly became overwhelming for the expectant mother.








The situation escalated dramatically as induction became necessary and family interference reached a dangerous level.









The central conflict revolves around a mother’s refusal to allow her own mother access during a life-threatening pregnancy complication — pre-eclampsia — which triggered an extreme reaction: a false welfare check claim accusing the daughter of posing a danger to herself and her baby. The escalation damaged an already fragile situation where the new mother was fighting for her health, stability, and autonomy amid homelessness and family breakdown.
The daughter acted out of necessity to protect her physical and mental well-being during a high-risk medical event, while the grandmother appears driven by entitlement, loss of control, and perhaps fear of exclusion from the grandchild’s life. This mismatch in expectations created a toxic cycle where boundaries were met with manipulation rather than understanding, turning a vulnerable time into additional trauma.
Relationship expert Dr. Ramani Durvasula, a clinical psychologist specializing in narcissism, has noted that “people who weaponize systems like mental health services often do so to regain power when direct control is lost.” This dynamic is evident here — the welfare check served as retaliation rather than genuine concern, further eroding trust and safety.
Moving forward, maintaining no contact or very low contact remains a valid protective choice when manipulation involves authorities or health systems. Document every incident calmly, inform key support people (like sister or midwives), and consider legal advice if false reports continue. Small, consistent steps like blocking numbers and having a trusted advocate present during future interactions can help rebuild a sense of security. Healing from this kind of betrayal takes time, but prioritizing the child’s and mother’s safety is always the right foundation.
Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:
The social media community responded with overwhelming support for the original poster, sharing similar stories of family members misusing welfare checks and praising her for going no contact.
Many readers expressed deep sympathy for the stress of pre-eclampsia combined with family drama and celebrated the mother’s strength:





A large group condemned the misuse of mental health welfare checks as a form of control and shared their own terrifying experiences:









Others highlighted the absurdity of the grandmother’s actions and offered harsh but supportive reactions:





![There's [a Facebook group for survivors] if you're interested. Also? I hope your mother steps on thumbtack-embedded Legos while barefoot and develops gangrene.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768269970627-6.webp)
A smaller number shared related stories of family pressure during birth or fears of similar retaliation:


![[Reddit User] − Please tell me she's not apart of your life anymore. . .](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768269987863-3.webp)

One reader described a complex, traumatic medical birth experience involving misdiagnosis, family visits, and a false child neglect report:












This story underscores how crucial it is to protect your health and peace during pregnancy and birth — even when it means making hard family decisions. False accusations and system abuse can cause lasting trauma, but clear boundaries and support from trusted people (like a protective sister) make recovery possible. Going no contact often becomes the safest way to prevent further harm.
Have you ever had to set strict limits with family during a medical or birth situation? How did you handle the fallout, and do you think the response from the mother was justified?
