Caught in the painful crossroads of love and mistrust, she watches as her boyfriend’s loyalty fractures under the weight of constant, meaningless chatter with another woman—his other child’s mother. The texts between them, laced with gossip and drama, feel like silent knives cutting through the fragile fabric of their relationship, leaving her heart aching and her boundaries shattered.
Despite her pleas and his promises to change, the cycle of disregard continues, his refusal to block the toxic connection igniting a storm of defensiveness and pain. Torn between love and self-respect, she struggles to decide if trust alone can heal wounds carved by betrayal or if standing firm against the crossing boundaries is the only path to peace.

AITA for telling my bf (and child’s dad) to block his other BM






According to relationship therapist Nedra Glover Tawwab, ‘Boundaries are the limits and rules we set for ourselves within relationships to protect our physical, emotional, and mental well-being.’ In this scenario, the OP is attempting to establish a necessary emotional boundary against behavior (excessive, non-co-parenting communication involving mutual gossip) that undermines her security.
The boyfriend’s reaction—yelling and refusing to block the other mother—indicates a significant lapse in emotional maturity and respect for his current partner’s needs. The fact that the ex-partner continues the dramatic contact suggests a boundary failure on her part as well, but the primary responsibility for respecting the OP’s boundary lies with the boyfriend. His refusal, especially when coupled with past instances of him and the other mother gossiping about the OP, suggests an unwillingness to prioritize the stability of his current relationship over maintaining a boundary-less connection with his ex. This behavior often points toward an unresolved emotional entanglement or a fundamental misunderstanding of what commitment entails.
The OP’s question about ‘just trusting him’ is misguided when the evidence suggests his actions actively erode trust. A constructive path forward requires the OP to clearly articulate the specific, non-negotiable terms of appropriate co-parenting communication versus personal communication. If the boyfriend cannot respect these clearly defined limits, the OP must reassess whether this relationship aligns with her fundamental need for security and respect.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.





























The original poster (OP) is clearly struggling with significant insecurity and hurt stemming from her boyfriend’s close, non-child-related communication with another former partner. Her direct action—demanding he block the other mother—shows a desperate attempt to enforce a boundary she feels is necessary for her emotional safety in the relationship.
Given that the boyfriend reacted with defensiveness and refusal, the core issue remains unresolved: Can a relationship thrive when one partner’s need for exclusive emotional boundaries directly conflicts with the other partner’s established, albeit inappropriate, relationship history? Is the OP right to demand an end to this communication, or is trust the only path forward?







