After the devastating loss of their mother seven years ago, a sixteen-year-old boy and his fifteen-year-old sister have been navigating a world forever changed. Their father’s new marriage to Kerry, a woman with three young children facing their own family struggles, brings a complex mix of hope, pain, and uncertain new beginnings.
Caught between preserving memories of their lost mother and embracing a blended family, the siblings quietly wrestle with feelings of sadness and withdrawal. Through family therapy, they begin to voice their boundaries and desires, seeking a fragile balance between honoring the past and opening their hearts to the future.

AITA for refusing to change one of my family therapy made rules/boundaries?






















As renowned family therapist and researcher Dr. Laura Markham explains, “Boundaries are about what you will or will not accept from others, and how you will take care of yourself when those boundaries are crossed.” This situation highlights a classic tension in blended families: the desire for emotional cohesion versus the need for individual autonomy, especially for adolescents navigating grief and identity.
The OP established clear, actionable boundaries (Rule 4) during a structured therapeutic process, which were agreed upon by the adults. These boundaries were not about rejecting Kerry entirely but defining the specific nature of the relationship following the loss of their mother. The father and Kerry’s current insistence on changing this rule, framed as wanting a ‘traditional family,’ disregards the emotional labor and specific needs established by the children for whom the structure was originally designed. For the OP, maintaining this boundary is likely tied to honoring the memory of their mother and protecting a sense of personal space and control during a time of significant familial restructuring. When parents attempt to unilaterally change rules that an older child explicitly stated were necessary for their well-being, it signals that the parents’ comfort or ideal vision outweighs the child’s established needs.
The OP’s adherence to the boundary was appropriate given the context of the initial agreement. A more constructive approach from the father and Kerry would be to re-engage in the therapeutic process to collaboratively *negotiate* a boundary change, rather than demanding compliance. Future handling of such issues requires mutual respect for the initial agreements. If the dynamic needs to shift, it should be approached not as the OP refusing the family, but as a new negotiation where the OP’s established needs (like maintaining separate parenting figures) are clearly understood and respected alongside the desire for unity.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.






















The original poster (OP) is facing a significant conflict where their established boundaries regarding their relationship with their stepmother, Kerry, are being challenged by both their father and Kerry after a period of relative stability. The OP and their sister initially agreed to specific ground rules during family therapy to integrate the new family structure, specifically maintaining emotional space and defining Kerry’s role as less than a parent. Their current refusal stems from a desire to uphold these previously agreed-upon personal limits against their father and stepmother’s push for a more unified, ‘traditional’ parental structure.
Given that the initial agreements were negotiated and set in therapy precisely to manage this transition, is the OP wrong for standing firm on their established boundary concerning their stepmother’s role, or are the father and Kerry justified in seeking to redefine family roles based on their current emotional closeness?







