She is a mother fiercely devoted to her four children, including a fragile three-month-old, yet finds herself isolated and unheard in the very family gatherings meant to celebrate love and unity. Her simple, natural act of nursing has sparked silent judgments and whispers, forcing her into the shadows while others feast, leaving her hungry not just for food, but for acceptance and respect.
Now, as a beach vacation looms, what should be a time of joy and bonding has turned into a battleground where her right to care for her child is questioned and confined. She stands at a painful crossroads—torn between protecting her baby’s needs and confronting a family that demands she sacrifice her dignity, while her husband’s dismissal deepens her sense of betrayal and loneliness.

AITA for refusing to only nurse in my bedroom on family trip?







As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation is a clear breach of personal boundaries regarding fundamental bodily autonomy and infant care, framed as a social requirement for inclusion.
The core conflict here involves mismatched expectations around acceptable public behavior and the unequal distribution of emotional labor. The in-laws’ reaction at the restaurant, followed by their explicit demand to confine nursing to the bedroom during the vacation, signals a desire to control the OP’s visibility and presence. This imposition forces the OP into isolation, effectively punishing her for a biological necessity. The husband’s position, threatening resentment if the OP does not comply, places her in a difficult position where her marital relationship is being leveraged against her role as a primary caregiver. This dynamic suggests a lack of shared understanding regarding parental responsibilities and the need to advocate for one’s immediate family unit (OP and children).
The OP’s action of refusing to go on the vacation is an appropriate defense of her basic rights and mental well-being under these restrictive terms. A constructive future approach would involve the OP and her husband establishing a unified front *before* engaging with the in-laws, clearly defining non-negotiable needs (like feeding arrangements) and agreeing that the in-laws’ discomfort does not override essential infant care.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

















The original poster (OP) is facing significant emotional distress due to her in-laws attempting to dictate where and when she can breastfeed her three-month-old baby, leading to a direct conflict with her need to care for her infant while maintaining family inclusion. Her desire to feed her child naturally clashes sharply with her in-laws’ apparent discomfort and her husband’s prioritization of avoiding conflict over supporting her needs.
Given the ultimatum—either comply with severe restrictions on breastfeeding during the vacation or face resentment from her husband—is the OP the unreasonable party for refusing to attend a trip where her basic caregiving needs are being policed, or are the in-laws justified in setting conditions for shared family time?







