Beneath the quiet surface of an amicable marriage, two souls drifted apart, bound by love for their children but devoid of the passion that once ignited their union. Natalie and her ex-husband shared a home, a friendship, and two children, yet the romantic flame had long since faded, leaving behind a fragile peace maintained for the sake of family.
When their son Michael faced the harsh reality of their separation, his heart shattered, unable to accept the dissolution of the family he knew. His desperate pleas for reconciliation echoed the pain of a child caught between loyalty and loss, as his parents gently unraveled the truth that some love stories evolve into different, quieter forms of love — ones that endure not in passion, but in respect and understanding.

AITA for telling my son to get over the divorce?


















According to developmental psychologist Erik Erikson, establishing autonomy and identity separate from parents is a key task in young adulthood. In this situation, Michael (28M) appears to be struggling with completing this task concerning his parents’ separation, clinging to the narrative of being a victim of trauma. The OP and Natalie made a joint, pragmatic decision to stay married for the children’s stability, which, while well-intentioned, may have inadvertently framed the divorce as a catastrophic failure rather than a mature transition when it finally occurred.
The OP’s frustration is understandable; they managed a difficult transition as proactively as possible, and Michael’s repeated public commentary disrespects their current lives and successful co-parenting efforts. However, setting a firm boundary in front of his fiancé’s in-laws crosses into public shaming, which often provokes further resistance rather than compliance. Michael’s need to ‘vent’ is a demand for validation of his emotional experience, regardless of the objective facts (i.e., the amicable nature of the divorce).
The OP’s reaction was emotionally justified but contextually poor. A more effective approach would have been to address the recurring theme privately, perhaps by validating the initial difficulty without accepting the ongoing narrative of irreparable damage. A constructive recommendation is for the OP to communicate separately with Michael, acknowledging the initial difficulty of the transition, but firmly stating that his current narrative is damaging to the present adult relationships and needs to cease being discussed, particularly in front of new family members.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.





![[deleted] NTA. It's been 9 years - more than enough...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/150e2e346ceb2f5a0ded7aedc37cde96.png)


Your point of view is valid, and so is your son’s. The mask of a perfect relationship is what got you here.


![[deleted] NTA Michael was an adult and living elsewhere when...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/35f878c2c27583a1cf2d01d42d229d09.png)

The original poster (OP) reached a breaking point after years of hearing critical comments from their adult son regarding a divorce that occurred nearly a decade prior. The central conflict arises from the OP asserting the need to move past the event, especially in a public setting, while the son insists on the validity of his long-held feelings of trauma and victimhood, demanding respect for his need to vent.
Does the adult child have the right to repeatedly express feelings of trauma over parents’ amicable divorce years later, even when it causes public embarrassment, or is the parent justified in setting a firm boundary demanding acceptance and moving forward?







