I adore my grandkids, but when my daughter-in-law Tina started casually dropping them off during my precious book club time without asking, I realized things needed to shift. What I did next taught her a lasting lesson in respect.
Nowadays, I live alone in the home where I raised my kids, and I’ve learned to stay active. After 42 years of marriage, losing my husband three years ago left a space in my routine I’m still learning to fill.
But I’ve lived a fulfilling life with my family, and I’m not one to dwell in sadness.
I have two amazing children—my son, Michael, and my daughter, Sarah.
They’ve given me four beautiful grandkids. Michael and his wife Tina have two little ones—both full of energy. Sarah lives out of state with her husband and their two children, so I don’t get to visit them as often as I’d like.
Michael’s family lives just a short drive away, so I see those grandkids quite regularly.
I deeply love all my grandchildren and have always been glad to lend a hand. Emergency school pickups, sudden fevers, work conflicts—I’ve always stepped in. No grumbles from me.
When little Emma caught the flu last month, I stayed over for three days, making soup and reading her favorite books. When two-year-old Jake was teething and miserable, I paced the halls with him for hours so Tina could rest.
That’s what grandmothers do, and I wouldn’t change it.
But recently, I carved out something just for me: a monthly book group with friends from church and the neighborhood.
We’re not there for tea and idle chatter. We choose thought-provoking books, dig into character arcs, debate endings, and share a lot of laughter when someone interprets a plot twist completely differently.
It’s become my sacred space. For three hours once a month, I get to be Martha the reader, not just grandma or caregiver.
Tina, however, didn’t bother to pretend she respected it.
“A book club? Really?” she said with a smirk when I told her. “That’s so cute, Martha. Like something out of a sitcom.”
Her tone was dismissive. Still, I brushed it off—I wasn’t doing this for her approval.
“We’re actually reading a brilliant mystery this month,” I told her. “It’s full of surprises.”
She gave me that condescending grin and steered the conversation toward needing help picking Jake up from daycare.
Looking back, that was a red flag. Tina had always been one to push limits, but I assumed it was just new-mom stress.
Now I see she didn’t view my book club as real—just a silly obstacle to her childcare plans.
And then it happened.
Just as we kicked off our very first official book club session, after weeks of coordinating, Tina showed up at my front door with both kids in tow.

It was a Thursday. I was laying out teacups and cutting a cake I’d baked. The ladies were due soon when I heard her car outside.
Before I even greeted her, she was already unbuckling the car seats.
“Hi, Martha!” she chirped. “Perfect timing! Need you to watch Emma and Jake for a few hours.”
“Tina, it’s book club day,” I reminded her. “I told you more than once.”
“Oh right, your book thing,” she said with a chuckle. “I’ll be quick. Back before dinner!”
And just like that, she was gone—no bag, no snacks, not even a note about nap times.
Of course, I adore my grandkids, but they’re toddlers. And it’s impossible to discuss symbolism in a novel while Jake’s feeding applesauce to your ferns and Emma is tearing tissues like confetti.
My friends arrived to find me scrambling to contain chaos. Emma had spread crayons all over the couch, and Jake was wielding a spatula like a sword.
“Maybe we should postpone,” Helen said as she dodged a flying Lego.
When Tina did the same thing a second time—again, no warning—my book club friends had had enough.
“Martha, you’ve got to put your foot down,” said Dorothy. “If you don’t, she’ll just keep doing this.”
“She’s taking advantage of your kindness,” Helen added. “This isn’t fair to any of us.”
They were absolutely right.
Tina saw me as a convenient sitter, not as someone with her own plans. She was ignoring my time and commitments.
That evening, I sat quietly and thought things through.
If she wanted to play the drop-off game, I’d teach her the rules—my way.
The next time Tina showed up just before book club, I greeted her sweetly, waited ten minutes after she left, and packed the kids into my car.
Then I drove straight to her yoga class downtown.
I stepped into the studio, Jake on my hip and Emma by the hand, and spotted her in a downward dog.
“Tina, honey!” I called in my most cheerful voice.
She turned mid-pose, horrified.
“Can you watch the kids for a bit? Won’t take long!” I said, mimicking her exact words.
Before she could argue, I placed Jake gently by her mat and nudged Emma to sit nearby.
“Thanks a million!” I smiled, and walked out.
And I kept doing it.
Hair appointment? I arrived, kids in tow. Brunch with friends? I dropped by with diapers.
Each time, I smiled and said, “Just a couple of hours—you don’t mind, right?”
The third time, after I left the kids with her at a café, she exploded.
“You can’t just dump the kids on me without warning!” she fumed later that evening. “I had plans! That was humiliating!”
I crossed my arms and replied, “Oh? Plans? Like I did for my book group?”
Her face flushed with anger, but I stayed calm.
“Tina, I’m happy to help. But you need to ask with respect and give me notice. Otherwise, I’ll just keep doing exactly what you taught me—drop and go.”
She opened her mouth to argue but thought better of it.
“Your move, dear,” I said with a smile.
She didn’t say a word.
But ever since? Book club has been peaceful. I think the message finally got through.