New Mom Refuses A Family Christmas Invasion After Birth, But Her In-Laws Say She’s Being Dramatic

The arrival of a first baby is supposed to be an exciting time, but it can also bring a lot of unexpected pressure. Suddenly, everyone wants to celebrate, visit, and be involved, while the new parents are often the ones who need the most rest and privacy.

The original poster (OP) is expecting her first child in December, which means the holiday season will look very different this year. While her husband’s large family is eager to travel and meet the baby, OP feels overwhelmed by the idea of hosting a crowd right before or after giving birth.

After several disagreements about visits, pictures, and even the delivery room, she is questioning whether she is being unreasonable or simply protecting her boundaries. Read on to see why Reddit had strong opinions about this situation.

A pregnant woman faced pressure from her husband’s family after setting boundaries for her baby’s first Christmas

New Mom Refuses a Family Christmas Invasion After Birth, But Her In-Laws Say She’s Being Dramatic
not the actual photo

'AITA for not wanting to spend Christmas with my husband’s family right after having a baby?'

I’m a 25-year-old woman and my husband and I are expecting our first baby in December.

We’re super excited, but I’m starting to feel like I’m losing my mind

For some context, I’m not very close with my family and we never really did big Christmas celebrations.

My husband is the complete opposite, he has a big family, they’re all very close

and every year everyone travels from different states to spend Christmas together, we usually alternate states every year,

this year we were supposed to go to Ohio, but since I’ll either be very pregnant or have just given birth, that’s obviously not happening.

Everyone’s solution was basically, “Well, let’s all come to you so we can meet the baby.”. The thing is… I really don’t want that.

If I haven’t had the baby yet, the last thing I want is a house full of people while I’m waiting to go into labor.

And if I have had the baby, I don’t really love the idea of 10-15 relatives flying in from all over the country

and wanting to hold a newborn during the middle of cold, flu, and RSV season.

When I said I didn’t think we’d be doing Thanksgiving or Christmas this year,

some family members told me I was being dramatic because it’s “just family” and they guilt tripped me with

the fact that a few people had already spend money on flights because they were really excited to come meet the baby..

There has already been a lot of tension around this pregnancy, for context

My husband and I found out the baby’s gender, but we decided not to tell anyone yet because we want to share it when we’re ready.

My mother-in-law thinks I’m gatekeeping information because she wants to start buying things for the baby.

I’m also a very private person. I barely post on social media, and I’ve already said I don’t want pictures of my baby posted online.

That didn’t go over well either. Then there’s the delivery room situation.

My personal opinion is that if you weren’t there helping make the baby, you don’t need to be there when the baby is coming out.

Not even my own mom will be in the delivery room.

But my mother-in-law and her sister keep saying they should be there because it’s their grandchild too.

I’ve already said no, but they keep bringing it up.

Honestly I’m tired of all the jokes and comments about me being dramatic,

my mother-in-law likes to joke that when the baby is with Grandma, Grandma makes the rules.

Maybe it’s a joke, but combined with everything else, it doesn’t really feel like one anymore.

My husband keeps telling me we’ll deal with it when the time comes, but I’m already stressed.

I feel like everyone is focused on the baby and nobody is thinking about the fact that I’ll either be postpartum and recovering or about to give birth.

Am I overreacting because this is my first baby.

I genuinely don’t want a huge family Christmas, I don’t want people pushing my boundaries,

and I don’t want to feel pressured into things I’m uncomfortable with. AITA?

There are moments in life when people need support more than celebration, and welcoming a first baby is one of those moments. A new parent is not just introducing a child to the world; they are also experiencing a major physical, emotional, and identity change.

In this situation, the OP was not simply refusing a holiday gathering. She was trying to protect a vulnerable period of recovery, adjustment, and bonding while feeling like everyone around her was focused on access to the baby rather than the needs of the person who gave birth.

The emotional conflict comes from two very different views of what family means. The husband’s family appears to see Christmas as an important tradition and a rare opportunity to share a milestone together. Their excitement about meeting the baby is understandable.

However, the OP is experiencing the situation through the lens of someone who may be heavily pregnant, recovering from childbirth, dealing with sleep deprivation, hormonal changes, and the uncertainty that comes with becoming a parent for the first time.

The issue is not that she does not value family relationships. It is that she feels her role as a recovering mother is being treated as secondary to everyone else’s desire to celebrate.

Her discomfort also appears connected to a larger pattern where her decisions about privacy, the delivery room, and information about the baby have repeatedly been challenged.

A helpful perspective comes from psychologist Dr. Diana Raab, who has written about the importance of boundaries during major life transitions. She explains that boundaries are not signs of rejection but tools that help people protect their emotional well-being and maintain healthier relationships.

During periods of significant change, such as becoming a parent, individuals often need clearer limits because their physical and emotional resources are already stretched.

This perspective helps explain why the OP’s concerns are not simply “new mom anxiety.” The postpartum period can involve physical recovery, emotional adjustment, and learning how to care for a newborn.

Expecting someone who has just given birth to host a large gathering or manage visitors’ expectations can unintentionally place the focus on guests rather than the parent and child. Family members may be excited, but excitement does not automatically override consent.

The situation also highlights the importance of the husband’s role. He is not just a family member wanting to keep traditions alive; he is the OP’s partner and the person who should help create a safe environment during one of the biggest changes of their lives.

“We’ll deal with it later” may feel reassuring to him, but to someone already feeling pressured, delayed decisions can increase anxiety.

Ultimately, welcoming a baby does not mean losing the right to privacy, rest, or boundaries. Family members can love a child deeply while still respecting the parents’ decisions about visits, photos, and celebrations.

The healthiest approach is not about keeping relatives away forever, but about recognizing that the baby’s arrival is also a major transition for the mother. Supporting her recovery is part of supporting the new family.

See what others had to share with OP:

These Redditors said OP is right to act now and create firm boundaries before the baby arrives

Maleficent-Yam4650 − NTA. These “jokes” are all precursors to real actions that will occur.

You’re not overreacting. You’re reading the signs correctly. This isn’t something you deal with when the time comes.

This is something you have a unified plan for now. You and your husband absolutely need to make that plan now.

Tight-Accountant440 − Husband needs to deal with this YESTERDAY. NTA at all.

Acceptable-Royal-257 − Tell your husband he needs to deal with this with you NOW! Or it’s going to snowball and they will run right over you

This group argued that postpartum recovery requires privacy, rest, and protection from unwanted visitors

Cryptographer_Alone − Anyone who's asking you to host a large family gathering when you're due/past-due/post-partum doesn't love you.

Period, end of story. And birth is not a spectator sport.

Tell your husband to grow a spine or gtfo. During delivery, inform the nurses you want no visitors.

You might also be able to put names on a block list so they can't even be told that you're a patient over the phone.

They'll handle security from there.

rojita369 − NTA. You have a husband problem. The last thing you need to be doing while freshly post partum is hosting people.

Even if everything goes to plan and you have a natural delivery with no complications,

you’re going to be recovering and bleeding heavily for at least a few weeks.

You both need to be prepared to stay home, hunker down, and develop your bonds as a family.

This is not the time for large family gatherings, period. As for the delivery situation, let the nurses know you don’t want visitors, they will handle it.

Your MIL has no business being in that room unless YOU want her there.

Don’t call them when you go into labor, they can find out about the baby when you’re home.

Lucidity74 − Oh honey. This family is stopping all over your boundaries and you need to put a stop to it right now.

Tell your husband he needs to protect your peace and your health.

Nobody should be visiting a newborn from coming off an airplane.

Your husband should be telling his mother to back off. Parents make the rules, not grandparents.

You are NTA but your husband is.

These commenters said OP’s husband must step up and handle his family’s pressure

Plenty-Hovercraft789 − F__k that NTA you have a husband problem. His responsibility to keep his family in line.

Everything you outlined is totally reasonable & something I would also do.

Don’t back down, don’t be a doormat, hold your ground and have a very firm conversation with your husband.

He needs to step up & all this stress is not good for you so far along in your pregnancy.

artemis9781 − NTA and your husband needs to tell his family to back off right now.

It will only get worse the closer to birth you get and he needs to enforce the boundaries you set (as a couple) with his family

Lazy-Association-311 − NTA. You have a husband problem. He needs to shut his family down when they stress you out.

Every single time. They are his circus. When you two got married you were suppose to become a unified front. He needs to step up.

This group warned about newborn health risks from frequent visitors and travel exposure

getstrongandlean − NTA The biggest risk is everyone travelling using different modes of transport and meeting the unvaccinated baby.

Newborns barely have any immune system.

Since you can't talk to pediatrician yet ask your OB if she can help provide any resources on newborn care.

Regarding your MIL pushing to be in delivery room talk to your care team and tell them

that you don't want anyone except your husband to be in the room with you.

Tell them even your husband is not authorized to bring anyone in.

It's clear your husband can't say no to his mom so he might go behind your back when you are vulnerable and bring your MIL in.

Your husband needs to grow a spine and support you.

After_Preference_885 − No one should be seeing a band new baby at all after travel,

not unless you really think they're gonna mask and follow precautions not to bring RSV, Covid or flu into your home.

NTA Your child's life depends on your ability to set these boundaries. Good luck.

Miss-Anonymous-Angel − NTA. “Just family” can absolutely give an illness to your future newborn that’ll harm them.

Stick to your guns and your husband should be the one dealing with his family, not you.

Do you think she was being too protective, or were her boundaries completely reasonable?Do you think she was being too protective, or were her boundaries completely reasonable?