• Home
  • About Us
  • Reddit
    • Aita
    • Family
    • Personal Stories
    • WIBTA
Saturday, July 18, 2026
No Result
View All Result
DVRL
  • Home
  • Animals
    • Dogs
    • Pets
  • Facts About Animals
  • Cats
  • Dogs
  • Home
  • Animals
    • Dogs
    • Pets
  • Facts About Animals
  • Cats
  • Dogs
No Result
View All Result
DVRL
No Result
View All Result

AITA for refusing to apologize for yelling at my mom that I wish she died instead of dad?

by Alex Johnson
November 27, 2025
in Aita
Reading Time: 10 mins read
0
10
SHARES
200
VIEWS
Share on Facebook

A young boy’s world shattered the day his father passed away, leaving him alone in the wreckage of his mother’s unbearable grief. For years, she was a ghost in their home—unresponsive, broken, and consumed by sorrow—while he quietly bore the weight of abandonment and loneliness, watching helplessly as the woman who once cared for him faded away.

Slowly, a fragile hope appeared when his grandfather reached her heart, pulling her back from the brink. But the mother who returned was a stranger, distant and cold, her love replaced by confusion and resentment. In this fractured family, the boy struggled to understand a mother who seemed to have lost herself—and him—while the silent ache of loss continued to echo between them.

AITA for refusing to apologize for yelling at my mom that I wish she died instead of dad?

My dad died 6 years ago. I (16m) was 10...

She lost her job, didn't do anything around the house,...

my aunt and my grandparents had to feed her and...

There were times I thought she was dead because she...

She focused on herself a lot for the next year...

She sent me to my grandparents a lot and didn't...

But then I found out it was because she was...

She told me every young man needs a dad figure...

She grabbed my face when I told her I wasn't...

Things remained weird and my grandparents encouraged mom to keep...

She was angry all the time because I didn't go...

But when she saw I wasn't she went nuts and...

She yelled that dad was dead and I needed to...

That I missed him and I felt like I lost...

She slapped me clean across the face with no hesitation...

topic was closed.

After that every interaction between us was tense and she...

She wanted me to be his best man and he...

Then they got married and yelled and cursed at me...

She said nobody looked at me and thought I was...

Three months ago we got into it again when I...

She told me I had no right to see them...

I told her I didn't care and dad was important...

She called me a disrespectful little shit, a c**t and...

She was slamming shit and throwing shit and I lost...

My grandparents had to come and remove me from the...

Maybe I would've had some chance of dad sticking around...

I'm staying with my grandparents now. My aunt takes me...

My grandparents told him she'd be the one arrested and...

Mom insists that I was gross to her with everything...

I wouldn't mean an apology if I gave one. AITA?

As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” In this deeply traumatic situation, the mother has consistently failed to establish healthy boundaries, instead enforcing them violently against her grieving son, especially when he resisted her imposed timeline for moving on and accepting a new partner.

The mother’s behavior—including severe withdrawal, subsequent emotional distance, forcing contact with a new partner, physical assault (slapping, grabbing), and verbal abuse—indicates she is struggling with unresolved, complicated grief that manifested as emotional neglect and later, projection and control over her son. The OP, at 16, experienced compounded trauma: the loss of his father, followed by the loss of his mother’s parenting capacity, and then physical harm. His ultimate outburst, while harsh, appears to be a desperate reaction to sustained emotional and physical invalidation. The step-father’s threat to call the police escalates the power imbalance and minimizes the mother’s documented abuse.

The OP’s actions were a defense mechanism against ongoing abuse and invalidation; therefore, demanding an apology from him while ignoring her documented physical assaults is inappropriate and manipulative. The constructive path forward involves prioritizing safety and establishing firm distance. The OP should not apologize for his feelings or his attachment to his deceased father. Instead, family mediation, involving the supportive grandparents, is necessary to address the mother’s abuse and establish non-negotiable terms for any future contact, focusing first on accountability for the physical violence.

What do you think of this story?





REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.

Ambitious-Border-906 I am so sorry for what you have had...

There is nothing threatening about your comment, it is a...

Your grandparents sound brilliant too, so glad they have got...

Ok_Pa*sage_6242 The man she married has to be a f**king...

their kid. NTA Here is what I would do if...

please make copies of them and keep them in a...

write out every single incident of her verbally or physically...

You might not ever need it and hopefully you don't...

I would also think about calling CPS and the police...

Your grandparents and aunt kind of shot themselves in the...

They didn't keep you safe enough by trying to keep...

It sounds like your mother has never got therapy for...

which is f**ked up and gross and disgusting. I'm very...

Are you closer to 17 than you are to 16?

The reason why that would be good is if a...

especially if they're in a safe place. When you turn...

If you have any family encouraging you to talk to...

It'll be easier for you to do things like get...

If you have a cell phone I would recommend downloading...

Your mom's not gonna stop on her own. So you...

I'm really sorry and I'm also terribly impressed with how...

I know you said something extreme to your egg donor,...

Such-Perspective-758 NTA And frankly I feel the same way about...

It would have been better for everyone if she was...

violent, tantruming narcissist and her flying monkey. Next time she...

Now your extended family is aware of her a**se you...

Rowana133 NTA but you need to contact whatever your areas...

custody. I also do not trust your maternal grandparents and...

They have failed in protecting you from her a**se and...

She does not deserve an apology, and she does not...

writing_mm_romance Work with your grandparents to get legal emancipation.

Also, I would consider reporting her a**se anyway.

I can't help but wonder if her visceral need for...

Peskanov Huge NTA. As a widow with 3 kids, one...

She neglected you then and now. I know that grief...

she is also a mother and she's failed you in...

She's has never properly processed her grief and instead is...

If your paternal grandparents can, have them pet*tion for custody....

WolferineYT ESH,

she's your mom and when she was shattered by your...

She sucks for yelling, hurting you, and all around acting...

I think its too late to undo your own part...

I wouldn't apologize when someone is threatening me with the...

An insincere apology isn't an apology at all.

The original poster (OP) is in a state of deep emotional distress, stemming from years of neglect and physical/verbal abuse following the death of his father. His central conflict involves his mother’s demands for an apology and reconciliation, despite her repeated acts of violence and dismissal of his grief, contrasted with his valid need to mourn his father and maintain connections with his paternal family.

Given the history of physical abuse and emotional invalidation, is the OP justified in refusing to apologize for expressing intense grief and anger when his mother is demanding accountability only for his final outburst, or is his statement so severe that an apology is necessary to open a path toward de-escalation?

Alex Johnson

Alex is an expert in finance and often shares tips on managing personal money.

Related Posts

My boyfriend (28M) said it is hurtful that I (27F) called him selfish and that I want to consider breaking up if he is voting for Trump in 2024 Election. AITA to call him that? What should I do?

My boyfriend (28M) said it is hurtful that I (27F) called him selfish and that I want to consider breaking up if he is voting for Trump in 2024 Election. AITA to call him that? What should I do?

by Michael Lee
March 15, 2026
0

In the quiet corners of their four-year relationship, a chasm has begun to grow—one carved by politics and deeply held...

AITA for telling my boyfriend “your pet p*eve is inconsequential” while we were driving?

AITA for telling my boyfriend “your pet p*eve is inconsequential” while we were driving?

by Jane Smith
November 27, 2025
0

In the quiet hum of a shared drive, a simple disagreement ignited a deep emotional rift between two people who...

AITA for refusing to let my father officiate my wedding

AITA for refusing to let my father officiate my wedding

by John Doe
January 2, 2026
0

For three decades, the reverend stood as a pillar of faith and tradition, yet behind the sermons and sacred vows...

AITA For my reaction when I got home and found my 6 months old daughter wearing the same diaper for 9 hours?

AITA For my reaction when I got home and found my 6 months old daughter wearing the same diaper for 9 hours?

by John Doe
October 30, 2025
0

A weary nurse, juggling the relentless demands of her job and the tender care of her two young daughters, finds...

AITA for insulting a customer at my dad’s restaurant for making unso***ited suggestions about my hair?

AITA for insulting a customer at my dad’s restaurant for making unso***ited suggestions about my hair?

by Jane Smith
November 8, 2025
0

In a small family deli, a young woman’s pride in her natural hair clashes with the narrow views of an...

Redditor Tells Friend To Stop Using Her Symptoms As Her Own Just To Chase Clouts, Gets Called The AH

Redditor Tells Friend To Stop Using Her Symptoms As Her Own Just To Chase Clouts, Gets Called The AH

by Alex Johnson
March 15, 2026
0

For years, two friends navigated the complexities of life and chronic pain, one open and vocal, the other quiet and...

Next Post
AITA for refusing to leave my cat with my parents for my friend’s birthday?

AITA for refusing to leave my cat with my parents for my friend's birthday?

  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Conditions
  • DMCA
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Ads-Powered-by-playwire-2021-standalone-small-white-300pxAdvertise on this site.

© 2025 AnimalsTrend - Fresh and Latest Content Daily.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Animals
    • Dogs
    • Pets
  • Facts About Animals
  • Cats
  • Dogs

© 2025 AnimalsTrend - Fresh and Latest Content Daily.