The Original Poster (OP), a 43-year-old man, is married to Amanda (42f) and they have two young daughters together. OP also has two older children, Liam (17m) and Sage (15f), from a previous, difficult divorce. Recently, Liam and Sage moved in with OP and Amanda full-time due to issues with their stepdad at their mother’s house.
Since the older children moved in, the atmosphere in the home has become tense, largely because Amanda expresses discomfort and seems critical of the new additions. The situation exploded when OP’s younger daughter, Becca (4f), who is going through a biting phase, claimed Sage hit her. Following the altercation, Amanda screamed for Liam and Sage to leave, leading them to stay overnight with friends. Amanda is now demanding that OP send his older children back to their mother permanently, forcing OP to confront the stability of his marriage.

AITAH for telling my wife she can leave because I’m not kicking my older kids out??



























According to Dr. Reese Price, a specialist in blended family dynamics, “Boundary setting in stepfamily integration is crucial, but when those boundaries translate into active exclusion or hostility toward existing family members, the foundation of the partnership is severely undermined.”
The OP describes a long-standing pattern where Amanda has distanced herself from his older children, first by leaving the home during their visits and now by actively pushing for their permanent removal. While Amanda’s fear escalates after the physical incident—especially given her own concerns about her young daughter’s biting—her demand that the teenagers leave permanently is an extreme reaction, suggesting underlying resentment or failure to accept the realities of a blended family structure. The OP’s quick validation of Sage’s accidental action, contrasted with his previous acknowledgment of Becca’s biting issue, shows he is attempting to manage the immediate conflict, but he has failed to address the deep-seated marital tension.
The OP’s response in telling his wife to pack and leave, though stemming from frustration over her treatment of his children, is highly volatile and damaging to the marriage. While his older children deserve stability, the situation demands professional mediation, not ultimatum-based decision-making. A constructive path forward requires both parties to pause the current crisis, agree on a temporary safe living arrangement for all parties, and commit to intensive couples and family therapy focused specifically on establishing respectful coexistence, rather than immediate exile for the teenagers.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.




















OP is currently in a highly conflicted emotional state, torn between protecting the children he has an obligation to house and supporting his wife, who is expressing severe distress and fear regarding Sage’s presence in the home. His recent ultimatum to Amanda—that she should leave if she is uncomfortable—shows how close the situation is to a breaking point, overriding his desire to avoid another divorce.
The core debate centers on parental commitment versus spousal partnership under stress. Should OP prioritize his role as a father by ensuring his older children have a stable home, even if it means risking his marriage? Or must he support his wife’s stated boundary regarding her safety and comfort around one of the stepchildren, potentially necessitating the older children’s removal?







