You are not their built in babysitter. She can pay someone else to take care of them it's not your job.
My DIL Treated My Home Like a Free Restaurant — Until I Finally Taught Her a Harsh Lesson

Supporting family can be rewarding, but it can also bring unexpected pressure. Strict expectations, food restrictions, and constant instructions can turn a kind gesture into a source of stress. One reader recently wrote to us describing just such a struggle with her daughter-in-law.
Here’s Joan’s letter:

Dear Now I’ve Seen Everything!
My grandkids, 7 and 9, come to my house every day after school. Since my daughter-in-law doesn’t cook, they have their lunches with me until she picks them up after work.
She insists everything be gluten-free and even hands me a weekly menu outlining exactly what dishes she wants me to prepare. At first, I went along with it happily. But after six months, it started to feel like I was running a free restaurant in my own home.
Today, she stormed in, furious because both kids had gotten sick. She shouted, “Watch your hygiene when you cook for my kids!”
I just smiled. Because what she doesn’t know is that for the past two weeks, I haven’t been cooking for them at all.
She froze when I revealed that I had been ordering food from the same gluten-free restaurant she uses. I said, “The kids must have gotten sick from your favorite restaurant. I’m tired of adjusting to your demands — I don’t work for you!”
She went pale, stood there in silence for a moment, and then walked out.
Now she’s decided she won’t bring the kids to my house anymore. Later that evening, my son called to scold me. He said, “What kind of grandma are you? Is it really that hard to cook for your own grandkids? You have nothing else to do all day!”
Do you think I was wrong for finally choosing my own comfort?
What would be the best way to handle this situation moving forward?
— Joan.
Thank you, Joan, for trusting us with your story. It’s clear how overwhelming it must be to feel treated as a cook instead of being appreciated as a grandmother. Your openness brings attention to struggles many others quietly endure. Here’s the advice we’d like to offer.
Use this “restaurant reveal” as a chance to reset the dynamic.
Your “restaurant reveal” caught her off guard, but it also proved one thing: the problem wasn’t your cooking. Instead of letting it be a one-time shock, use it to reset expectations.
Action: Suggest a new arrangement: “Since you trust that restaurant, I can keep ordering from them if you prefer, but I’ll need you to cover the weekly cost.”
This reframes your role from unpaid cook to a grandparent simply helping with childcare, and it creates a clear, manageable system that doesn’t require you to spend hours in the kitchen.
Shift your role from being their cook to simply being their grandparent.
Right now, your time with the kids is tied to meals and their mother’s expectations. That makes every interaction feel like work.
Action: Offer to pick up the kids for activities that don’t involve food — playground trips, movie nights, or homework help in the evenings. Say to your son, “I still want time with them, but I want it to be about us, not about what’s on the table.” This shifts your role from unpaid chef to cherished grandmother.
Assign a real monetary value to the childcare setup.
Six months of daily gluten-free cooking is not just “helping” — it’s unpaid labor. Your son dismissing it as “nothing to do all day” shows he doesn’t grasp that.
Action: Calculate the cost of hiring a part-time nanny or cook for six months, then tell your son, “This is what my contribution has been worth. If you expect it to continue, we need to talk about sharing costs.” Sometimes seeing numbers on paper changes dismissiveness into respect.
Work on repairing your relationship with your son one-on-one.

Your disagreement is really with your daughter-in-law, but your son’s phone call showed something more painful — he now sees you as opposing his family. That stings far more than any criticism about cooking.
Action: Suggest meeting him privately, somewhere calm, and talk openly about how you feel.
You might say: “Hearing you question what kind of grandma I am really broke my heart. I adore the kids, but I also need you to support me, not just follow her rules.”
This helps you repair the bond that’s been strained by outside pressures.
Another reader told us about a family conflict that erupted when her daughter-in-law tried to turn her long-awaited retirement cruise into a free babysitting trip. But she wasn’t so easy to pressure. Read on to see how she handled the situation — and what unfolded afterward.
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