A concerned mother embraces her newborn indoors, surrounded by newspaper articles.

A woman says her fiancé’s sister openly hates her, yet his family keeps begging her to hand over the baby to hold

When her fiancé’s sister made it clear she wanted nothing to do with her but still demanded to hold the baby at every family gathering, one new mother found herself trapped in a conflict that thousands of parents quietly recognize: a relative who treats the child as a prize and the parent as an obstacle. The scenario, shared on Reddit’s r/inlaws forum, drew hundreds of responses and put a name to a pattern that family therapists say they encounter regularly in practice.

“This is one of the most common postpartum conflicts I see,” said Dr. Sheryl Ziegler, a licensed professional counselor and author of Mommy Burnout, in a 2024 interview with Today’s Parent. “The new mother is hormonally vulnerable, sleep-deprived, and biologically wired to keep her infant close. When a family member dismisses that instinct, it doesn’t just feel rude. It feels threatening.”

As of March 2026, parenting forums and social media groups continue to surface these stories at a striking pace, suggesting the tension between protecting a newborn and keeping extended family happy is far from resolved.

The pattern: “She likes the baby, not me”

a man holding a baby in his arms
Photo by Tamara Govedarovic

The Reddit post that sparked the latest wave of discussion described a sister-in-law who openly disliked the mother yet insisted on holding the baby at every visit, then stalled when asked to give the child back. Commenters identified the dynamic immediately: the sister-in-law treated the baby as separate from the mother, as though affection for the infant entitled her to bypass the parent entirely.

That experience is not unusual. In a separate thread on Reddit’s r/beyondthebump, another mother admitted she simply did not want her sister-in-law holding her baby at all. The top-voted advice was direct: any time the sister-in-law asks, say “No, not right now,” and do not elaborate. The consensus reflected a shift that perinatal mental health advocates have encouraged for years. A mother’s discomfort around her own infant is not a personality flaw. It is information.

Research supports that instinct. A 2021 study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders found that perceived lack of social support and interpersonal conflict in the postpartum period were significant predictors of postnatal depression and anxiety. In other words, the stress of fighting for basic boundaries is not just annoying. It carries clinical consequences.

When “just let them hold the baby” stops being harmless

The pressure to hand over a newborn rarely comes from one person. In the original post, the fiancé’s wider family reportedly urged the mother to pass the baby to the sister-in-law as a goodwill gesture, framing compliance as the price of family harmony. A similar dynamic appeared in another Reddit thread, where a mother described in-laws who took her baby, walked away, and rolled their eyes when she asked for the child back. One commenter argued that the only effective response was a firm, public correction: “Stop. This is not okay.”

A third post, on Reddit’s r/AmItheAsshole, reframed the issue entirely. The community’s top reply argued that the real problem was not the relatives. It was the fiancé who stood by while others overrode boundaries both parents should have set together. For mothers who already feel outnumbered, that distinction matters: the conflict is not just with a difficult in-law. It is with a partner who treats the mother’s instincts as negotiable.

Dr. Alexandra Sacks, a reproductive psychiatrist who coined the term “matrescence” to describe the psychological transition into motherhood, has written in The New York Times that new mothers often struggle to assert authority over their own children because the culture frames maternal protectiveness as overreaction. “There’s an unspoken rule that a ‘good’ new mother is easygoing and shares the baby freely,” Sacks noted. “But the biological and psychological reality is far more complex.”

Drawing lines without blowing up the relationship

For parents caught between a hostile in-law and a partner who avoids confrontation, therapists generally recommend a few concrete strategies:

  • Use the baby’s needs as the frame. “She’s overstimulated and needs to stay with me right now” is harder to argue with than “I don’t want you holding her.” Several mothers in the Reddit threads described repeating a version of this line until it stuck.
  • Agree on rules before the visit, not during it. The American Academy of Pediatrics’ HealthyChildren.org guidance emphasizes that both parents should align on who holds the baby, for how long, and under what conditions, particularly during cold and flu season or when the infant has not yet completed early vaccinations.
  • Make the partner the messenger. Therapists consistently advise that each partner manage their own family of origin. If the sister-in-law is the fiancé’s sister, the fiancé should be the one setting the boundary.

That last point surfaced repeatedly across every thread. In the discussion about the sister-in-law who refused to return the baby, commenters argued that the father’s silence was not neutrality. It was a choice, and it told the mother exactly where she ranked. When he does not step in, resentment builds, and the baby becomes the only leverage the mother feels she has left.

None of this means extended family should be shut out. Grandparents, aunts, and uncles play a meaningful role in a child’s life, and most new parents want that involvement. But involvement that requires a mother to override her own instincts to keep the peace is not support. It is a transaction, and the cost falls on the person least equipped to absorb it.

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