A man’s world shattered by betrayal, his decade-long marriage crumbled under the weight of infidelity. The woman he once pledged forever to chose a fleeting affair with an intern, tearing apart not just their union but the dreams they had woven together. Sterile and vulnerable, he bore the sting of her cruelty when she wielded his inability to have children as a weapon against him, a cruel justification for her treachery.
Surrounded by the support of his family yet isolated by the divided loyalty of his beloved niece, he was left to pick up the fragments of a life broken but not defeated. Slowly, he rebuilt himself, finding new love and a family in Jane and her children, embracing a future filled with hope. Yet, the past calls him back with the invitation to his niece’s wedding, stirring a storm of unresolved pain and unexpected emotions.

AITA, Am I an idiot for not accept to be best man at my niece’s wedding because she wants me to enter with my ex wife?











According to Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of ‘The Dance of Anger,’ setting and maintaining boundaries is essential for self-respect and healthy relationships. In situations involving past trauma, like infidelity, the injured party has the right to define the terms of interaction, especially in high-stress social settings.
The OP’s reaction stems from legitimate emotional injury; the ex-wife’s infidelity, compounded by using the OP’s sterility as a justification, represents a profound double betrayal. Asking the OP and the ex-wife to serve as joint best men forces a public display of reconciliation or tolerance that the OP has not processed or agreed to. This request puts an unfair emotional labor burden on the OP for the sake of others’ comfort. The niece, while perhaps well-meaning, is asking the OP to sacrifice their emotional well-being for her wedding day staging.
The family’s reaction suggests a focus on maintaining external appearances rather than validating the OP’s long-term pain. While attending for the niece is understandable from a familial duty perspective, being forced into a primary supporting role alongside the source of trauma is inappropriate. The OP should communicate clearly to the niece that they support her marriage but cannot participate in the bridal party structure as requested. A constructive path forward would be to attend the wedding individually, without the joint role, or to explain that attending that day is too difficult, thereby protecting their established boundaries.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.





























The individual is caught between honoring their need for emotional safety following a severe betrayal and the perceived obligation to maintain family harmony, particularly for their niece’s important life event. The central conflict lies in upholding personal boundaries against the pressure from family members who prioritize social appearances over the depth of the past emotional injury.
Should the individual prioritize their own necessary emotional boundaries by declining to attend an event where they must share a central role with their ex-wife, or is the perceived duty to support their niece, even under painful circumstances, the more appropriate path?



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