I adore my grandkids. I truly do. But when my daughter-in-law Tina started casually dropping them off during my precious book club time without even asking, I knew something had to give. What I did next? Well, it taught her a lesson she won’t soon forget.
These days, I live alone in the house where I raised my children. After 42 years of marriage, losing my husband three years ago left a space I’m still learning to fill. But I’ve never been one to wallow. Life continues, and I’ve found ways to keep busy. My two children—Michael and Sarah—have blessed me with four beautiful grandkids. Sarah lives out of state, but Michael and his wife Tina live close by, which means I see their two little ones often. Very often.
I’ve always happily stepped in when they’ve needed me. Sick days, school pickups, late-night fevers—I’m there. When little Emma caught the flu last month, I stayed over for three days, reading to her and making soup. When Jake was teething and miserable, I paced the floors for hours so Tina could sleep. That’s what grandmothers do. And I’ve never once resented it.
But after years of always saying yes, I finally carved out something just for me—a monthly book club with friends from church and the neighborhood. It wasn’t just idle gossip and tea, either. We read everything from thrillers to historical dramas, diving deep into the stories, sharing perspectives, and laughing over wildly different interpretations. For those three hours each month, I wasn’t just Grandma or Martha-the-helper. I was simply Martha, the reader. And I cherished it.
Tina, however, didn’t quite share my enthusiasm.
“A book club? Really?” she scoffed when I first mentioned it. “That’s so cute. Like something from an old sitcom.”
I smiled, refusing to let her jab deflate me. “Actually, we’re reading a brilliant mystery this month. It’s full of twists.”
She rolled her eyes and steered the conversation back to whether I could help with Jake’s daycare pickup that week.
Looking back, that was my first warning. Tina didn’t see my book club as important. In her mind, it was a hobby she could override whenever she pleased.
And that’s exactly what she did.
On the day of our very first official meeting, after weeks of coordination with my friends, I was setting out tea cups and slicing homemade lemon cake when I heard her car pull into the driveway. Before I could even greet her, Tina was unbuckling car seats.
“Hi, Martha! Perfect timing!” she called brightly. “Need you to watch Emma and Jake for a few hours.”
I blinked. “Tina, today’s book club. I reminded you several times.”
“Oh, right! Your book thing.” She laughed, waving it off. “I won’t be long. Back before dinner!”
And just like that, she was gone—no bag, no instructions, not even a spare diaper.
Within minutes, my living room was chaos. Crayons rolled across the floor, tissues flew like snowflakes, and Jake was feeding applesauce to my poor ferns. My friends arrived to find me wrestling with a toddler and ducking flying Legos.
“Maybe we should postpone,” Helen said, dodging a crayon missile.
When Tina pulled the same stunt a second time, my friends had had enough.
“Martha, you need to put your foot down,” Dorothy said, her voice firm. “If you don’t, she’ll keep doing this forever.”
“She’s taking advantage of your kindness,” Helen added. “You deserve your own time.”
They were right. Tina saw me as free childcare, not as someone with her own life and commitments. That night, I sat quietly and thought it through. And then, I hatched a little plan.
The next time she tried it—pulling up right before book club—I greeted her with my usual smile. “Of course, Tina! Happy to help.”
But ten minutes after she drove off, I buckled the kids into my car and drove straight to her downtown yoga class. She was in the middle of a downward dog when I walked into the studio, Jake on my hip and Emma trailing behind.
“Tina, sweetheart!” I called cheerfully. Heads turned. “Here you go! Won’t take long—back before dinner!”
Her face flushed crimson as I set Jake beside her mat and handed Emma a coloring book. “Thanks a million!” I chirped and walked out.
And I didn’t stop there. Hair appointment? I arrived with the kids in tow. Brunch with friends? I dropped by, babies in hand. Mani-pedi? Guess who showed up mid-massage?
Each time, I smiled sweetly. “Just a couple of hours—you don’t mind, do you?”
By the third drop-off—this time interrupting her brunch at a trendy café—Tina had had enough.
“You can’t just dump the kids on me like this!” she fumed later that evening. “I had plans! It was humiliating!”
I folded my arms and looked at her calmly. “Plans? Like the ones I had for my book club?”
Her face burned, but I didn’t let up. “Tina, I love my grandchildren. I’m always happy to help. But you need to respect my time and ask, not assume. If you can drop them off without asking, so can I.”
She opened her mouth to argue, then closed it, stewing in silence.
Since then? My book club has gone uninterrupted. Tina hasn’t tried it again. I believe the message finally landed.
Respect, after all, is a two-way street.