Aunt backs out of babysitting her spoiled 4-year-old nephew for free when his parents refuse to address and even encourage his consistent tantrums: 'I gave them plenty of warnings that his behavior was not acceptable or appropriate in my home

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    "AITA for not giving my SIL time to find alternative childcare before refusing to watch her son anymore..."

    My (28f) husband (33m) has an older half brother (43m) who has a son (4) around our daughter's age (also 4). My SIL (36f, half-brother's wife) works, but I do not. I am a SAHM, because my husband worked in his twenties to build two pretty successful local businesses & he works a lot so it's better for our family for me to stay home. We also have a farm, so we have lots of land and it's basically a kid's dream. My BIL & SIL spent their twenties traveling so they don't really have their finances i
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    At first, I felt bad for my BIL/SIL so I offered to help them with childcare with my nephew. I do this for free, they don't pay me anything to watch him. And it was great at first, because my daughter had someone to play with while I took care of farm & house chores. I quickly realized my nephew is not being parented well. I get that they both work, but they over-indulge him to a point that is kind of ridiculous. He thinks everything is negotiable. No doesn't mean no, it means scream about it un
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    I see that his mother encourages this behavior, every time he is upset she tries to negotiate with him & usually just gives him what he wants but says "we'll talk about it later at home when he's calmed down." I roll my eyes at this because I just know it isn't true, they don't address anything with him. I know because I spend every weekday with him and I feel like I'm constantly having to re-parent him.
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    For instance, one huge issue is they have taught him he does not have to share. If he doesn't want to share a toy, he doesn't have to. This causes a lot of problems at my house. My rule with my daughter is if you want to hang out with your friends, you have to share. We put up toys that she genuinely doesn't want to share, but it's like two plush toys that are special to her, not all of her toys. Her dad & I have made it clear to her that we buy her toys to share, not to hoard. I expect the same
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    She has always had an issue with how I handle sharing, she's tried to coach me on how to properly handle sharing, according to her. She expects me to essentially distract my child with another toy if her son doesn't want to share. I made it clear that when he's at my house he has to follow my rules. I do not entertain them or manage their play, if a toy is causing problems it disappears. Period. They don't
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    always have to play the same thing at the same time, but if they can't at least take turns with a toy then it gets put away and if it's his toy then I tell him it won't be allowed back. I have preemptively confiscated toys that I've previously said were not allowed back when I've seen that he has them again. I used to give him second chances but I quickly learned that it was just teaching him he could undermine my authority.
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    His mom, however, constantly tries to undermine my authority. Once a week I take them to the park, it's about a quarter mile down the road from our house so I make the kids walk or ride their scooters or bikes. My nephew is lazy and always wants to be carried or pushed. I give a firm no, and he cries. But then his mom messaged me saying "(Son) doesn't want to walk to the park anymore so we came up with a plan, why don't you take them to
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    the water park that way you all can drive and I'll leave you his car seat." I said, no, because the water park costs money, it's harder to watch two kids there, and I never agreed to carpool them anywhere. She then found another park on the other side of town and suggested that. Again, I did not agree to carpool my nephew anywhere. He knew about these attempts at rearranging our plans because he'd bring up how his mom said we could go to another park, and then cry when I tell him I wasn't open t
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    My nephew has caused a lot of issues that I ultimately blame his parents for, like taking one bite out of every strawberry in the bowl just to be spiteful so my daughter couldn't have any. That has happened multiple times with multiple snacks. Trying to sneakily steal toys and then his mom asking if he can borrow it when I check his bag and call him out on it. But my final straw with my nephew was when he started trying to encourage my daughter to push boundaries with me. I'd tell him he
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    couldn't do something like climbing up the gate to the horse pasture and he'll just look at me then say "(Daughter) climb up here with me." He's been doing this for a few weeks now & I told his mother that if he was going to encourage my daughter to disrespect my rules he would not be allowed back over. She essentially tried to defend him saying "it's age appropriate." She really just brushed it all off. Well, it happened again yesterday. We were baking cookies & he decided to throw chocolate ch
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    him to stop and he ignored me and told my daughter to throw them with him. She was scared to do it because she knew it was against my rules, so then he had an absolute meltdown when I took him away from the kitchen & put him in time out. He actually started throwing things around my living room and screaming at me. He kept coming back into the kitchen and I had to physically remove him over and over again. I have never had these issues with my own kid so I was losing my mind. I called my SIL & m
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    Maybe I'm an AH for reaching my breaking point & not giving them more notice, but I thought I was being helpful. And I gave them plenty of warnings that his behavior. was not acceptable or appropriate in my home. I gave advice on how to parent a little better, maybe that makes me an AH since he's not my kid but I don't know. I told her he wouldn't be allowed back multiple times, but this time I mean it. My SIL thinks I'm an AH because I refuse to acknowledge that our children are just different,
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    think he's always been allowed to misbehave and he's been taught that if he has a violent screaming & throwing meltdown then he'll get his way. She's mostly mad saying that she doesn't have time to figure out what she's going to do with him, and she wants me to finish off the week. I just simply have reached my limit and do not want to continue watching him, even for just a few more days. So AITA for not giving them a week to find another childcare option, should I have given them more notice/ti
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    Inside-Property-4579 10h ago As a former preschool teacher, I can tell you that with THAT many warnings and issues he would be asked to leave the school. I can't wait for mom and son to find out all the rules he will be expected to follow at school.
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    Ok-Control2520 · 10h ago . While it would be 'nice' of you to give her notice and enough time to find alternate arrangements . . . it also would have been 'nice' if she respected your parenting and free daycare. You provide free daycare. She should accept it for what it is and shut her mouth or pay for a daycare provider that will put up with both his and her behaviour.
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    ProfPlumDidlt • 10h ago NTA. They had plenty of warning. I'd also be very blunt with them: that nephew isn't a bad kid; he just has bad parents who don't set and enforce rules and that they are ruining his life because no one else will tolerate his behaviors.
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    Ballas333 10h ago . NTA. My partner works with kids as her career. And she is trained to handle and "fix" these behaviors. That's her job. If she wasn't getting paid for it I would be begging her to stop because of how stressful it is. You are not getting paid to parent a kid that isn't yours. That alone gives you the right to stop at any point. It might not be the nicest thing, but you're totally justified.
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    I'd also like to mention that you're not refusing to watch him. anymore because of his behavior. Yes it's an issue, but it's not the heart of the problem. The heart of the problem is that your BIL and SIL are undermining your authority over your own home and just straight up ignoring you at every turn. And you know, raising a monster. Make sure to tell them that next time they talk to you about it. It wasn't their son's behavior, but theirs.
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    Agitated-Location-12 10h ago ΝΤΑ He's destroying things, stealing, and blatantly disrespectful. All because his parents aren't parenting him. If he was in a standard daycare the same thing would be happening there too. It's unfortunate that the cousins are going to lose quality time together because his parents won't get his behavior unders control.
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    jmsturm 9h ago She has a lot of helpful opinions for someone not paying for daycare

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