The poster, a 31-year-old woman, details a situation involving her 8-year-old daughter who recently started at a new school. The core issue revolves around the excessive and controlling involvement of the poster’s mother and older sister, who are heavily invested in school activities.
This involvement quickly turned into interference, ranging from changing the daughter’s packed lunches to forcing social interactions and even unilaterally altering her extracurricular schedule based on outdated gender roles. After her daughter became mortified and upset, the poster escalated the issue by meeting with the principal to have her family placed on an “intervention watch list” at the school. This action has resulted in severe backlash from her mother and sister, leading the poster to question if her drastic response was justified.

AITA for Putting My Family on a Schoolwide “Intervention Watch” List?













As renowned family therapist Dr. Virginia Satir stated, ‘Change happens when the student is ready and as uncomfortable as she or he can be.’ While Satir often focused on individual readiness, the principle applies here: the OP reached a point of maximum discomfort where inaction was no longer possible, necessitating a significant, boundary-enforcing change.
The actions of the mother and sister demonstrate a classic case of boundary violation driven by a need for control and misplaced attachment to the role of ‘involved’ caregivers. By volunteering for everything and then overriding the parent’s decisions (lunch, recess activities, gym class), they effectively undermined the OP’s parental authority in a public setting. Enrolling the child in knitting club because dodgeball was deemed ‘unladylike’ is a clear imposition of personal values and gender stereotypes onto the child, causing emotional distress.
Taking the step of involving the principal was an appropriate, albeit drastic, measure because the family’s actions were directly impacting the child’s well-being and social comfort at school. Their subsequent smear campaign confirms the necessity of that external intervention. For future situations, the OP should consider implementing structured family meetings to clearly articulate and document agreed-upon boundaries *before* conflicts escalate, focusing on ‘I statements’ regarding the child’s autonomy rather than accusations about the family’s behavior.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.






















The original poster (OP) is currently facing intense emotional backlash from her mother and sister, who feel their efforts and intentions to ‘help’ the daughter are being unjustly rejected. The central conflict lies between the OP’s need to establish firm parental boundaries regarding her child’s school life and her family’s deeply ingrained belief that their unsolicited guidance is necessary for the daughter’s well-being.
The debate centers on whether setting swift, official boundaries via school administration was an appropriate or an overly aggressive measure to stop interference. Should the OP have first attempted a private, mediated conversation, or was direct administrative action necessary to protect the child from further embarrassment and manipulation?







