The arrival of a newborn often brings joy and new beginnings, but for this young couple, it has also reopened old wounds tangled in family history. The wife’s fraught relationship with her stepfather, David, who has long struggled to find his place in her life, now faces a new challenge as he insists on a title that feels deeply uncomfortable and inappropriate to her and her husband.
In the shadow of loss and complicated bonds, the couple grapples with protecting their son’s identity and boundaries, while David’s insistence on being called ‘Avi’—a name meaning father—threatens to rewrite the fragile lines of respect and acceptance they have fought to maintain. The emotional tension reveals the profound impact of family roles, names, and the legacy each person wishes to leave behind.

AITA for telling my wife’s stepdad our newborn son isn’t calling him ‘father’?








As renowned family therapist Dr. Terrence Real explains, ‘The primary task of the adult child is to distinguish between the parent they had and the parent they need.’ While the quote directly addresses the adult child’s relationship, it highlights the importance of defining roles based on functional and acknowledged relationships rather than assumed or desired titles. In this situation, the parents are attempting to define the functional, acknowledged role of the stepdad in relation to their child.
The stepdad’s insistence on the title ‘Avi’ is a clear attempt to solidify a paternal role that both he and the wife’s mother previously agreed would not be imposed on the wife. His objection to ‘grandpa’ because the wife made a point about the biological grandfather being absent suggests a sensitivity to being excluded from a primary male role, leading him to overcompensate with a more powerful title. This behavior indicates a struggle with relational boundaries and a potential need for validation that supersedes the existing family agreement.
The OP’s action in telling the stepdad their son will not call him ‘father’ was appropriate in upholding the existing boundary regarding the stepdad’s paternal role. However, moving forward, the recommendation is to engage in a calm, unified discussion with both the wife and the stepdad. The focus should shift from rejecting ‘Avi’ to collaboratively suggesting alternatives that acknowledge his importance (e.g., ‘Step-Grandpa’ or using his first name) while maintaining the integrity of the terms previously set.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.





























The original poster (OP) and his wife are facing a conflict where the wife’s stepdad is insisting on being called ‘Avi’ (father in Hebrew) by their newborn son, a request that conflicts with the established boundary that he is not the wife’s father figure. The OP’s action of refusing this specific title reflects their desire to protect the narrative and their son’s understanding of family roles, which the stepdad is resisting by expressing dissatisfaction with any alternative naming.
Given the history of the stepdad overstepping boundaries and the specific context of the desired title ‘Avi,’ are the parents justified in setting a firm boundary regarding naming conventions, or is the stepdad’s emotional reaction to being excluded from the ‘father’ title a reasonable expectation given his role in the family?







