I love being a grandmother. I’ve always been there for my family—late-night babysitting, last-minute daycare pickups, you name it. But when my daughter-in-law Tina started using me as a drop-in nanny during my book club without even asking, I knew something had to change.
Since my husband passed three years ago, I’ve been learning how to fill the quiet. I live alone now, in the same house where I raised my kids. I stay busy, see friends, and do my best to keep a full heart. My son Michael lives nearby with Tina and their two young kids—Emma and Jake—so I see them often. My daughter Sarah lives out of state with her own little ones, so visits are more rare.
I’ve always helped Michael’s family when needed. Whether it was Emma’s flu or Jake’s teething, I was there without question. I did it all out of love—no complaints, no strings attached. But recently, I carved out something just for me: a monthly book club. A few women from church and the neighborhood meet to talk about books—not gossip. We read mysteries, thrillers, even the occasional classic, and we get deep into themes and character motives. It became something sacred to me. For a few hours each month, I wasn’t just “Grandma Martha”—I was Martha the reader.
When I told Tina about the club, she laughed. “A book club? That’s cute,” she said with a smirk, like it was some kind of retirement joke. I ignored the tone—this wasn’t about her approval.
But then, on the very first day of our official meeting, she showed up at my door with the kids in tow.
“Perfect timing,” she said, already unbuckling car seats. “Can you watch Emma and Jake for a few hours?”
I reminded her—politely—that it was book club day. She waved it off. “Oh, your little book thing. I’ll be back before dinner!” And she was gone. No bag. No snacks. No instructions. Just gone.
I love my grandkids, but it’s hard to talk about literary devices when Jake is chasing the dog with a wooden spoon and Emma is turning tissue boxes into confetti. My friends arrived and walked into pure chaos. Helen was nearly hit by a flying Lego. Dorothy gave me that look—the one that says this isn’t going to fly.
I tried to make it work, but when Tina did it again the next month, I knew it wasn’t forgetfulness—it was entitlement.
“Martha,” Helen said gently after that second disaster, “you’ve got to say something. She’s taking advantage of you.”
They were right. Tina didn’t see me as a person with her own schedule—just a convenient sitter she didn’t need to call in advance.
So I decided to teach her a lesson. Grandma style.
The next time she showed up unannounced during book club, I smiled sweetly, let her leave, then waited ten minutes. I packed up the kids and drove straight to her yoga studio. I walked in, Jake on my hip and Emma by the hand. She was in the middle of a downward dog when I called out, “Tina, honey! Can you watch the kids for a bit? Won’t take long!” I handed Jake over, gave Emma a pat on the head, and walked out.
She was speechless.
But I didn’t stop there. Hair appointments, brunch with her friends—I found her every time. Dropped the kids off. Smiled. Said, “Back before dinner!” Just like she did to me.
After the third time—when I left the kids with her at a café—she snapped.
“You can’t just dump the kids on me without warning!” she said later that night, fuming.
I didn’t raise my voice. I just looked at her calmly. “Really? You had plans? Funny, so did I—twice now.”
She glared. I continued, “Tina, I’m happy to help. But I deserve the same respect you’d expect from me. Ask me. Give me notice. Or I’ll just keep doing what you taught me—drop and go.”
She opened her mouth to argue, then closed it again. I smiled. “Your move, dear.”
Since then, book club has been gloriously peaceful. Not a single unscheduled drop-off. I think the message finally landed.
And as I sip my tea, flipping through the next chapter of this month’s pick, I can’t help but feel a little proud. Sometimes, all it takes is one well-placed plot twist to remind people who’s writing the story.
