A mother’s heart is torn between the love she holds for her daughters and the growing tension that threatens to unravel their fragile family bond. After the tragic loss of her first husband, she rebuilt her life with Mark, hoping for peace and unity, yet the unspoken divides between her older daughter Ava and the rest of the family grow deeper with every passing day.
Caught in the middle of conflicting loyalties and unvoiced resentments, she feels herself slipping into despair, desperate for a solution that honors everyone’s feelings. The story of their family is a raw, emotional journey through grief, love, and the struggle to find harmony in a home shadowed by past pain and present challenges.

AITA for applying to adopt a dog after my daughter moved?



















According to Dr. Harriet Lerner, an expert in boundaries and family systems, one key element in adult relationships is establishing appropriate boundaries, especially when children leave the nest. Lerner often emphasizes that while we have responsibilities to maintain family connection, we also have the right to live our own lives without undue control from adult children.
The core issue here appears to be a dynamic of perceived obligation versus personal autonomy. For years, the mother upheld an agreement with Ava, which is commendable for honoring a commitment made while Ava lived at home. However, Ava is now 24, lives independently, and is attempting to impose veto power over decisions in her parents’ established household. Ava’s emotional reaction—stating the dog makes her ‘alienated’—suggests a potential over-investment of emotion in a non-essential household matter, perhaps feeling a loss of control now that she is physically separate from the family unit.
The parents have already taken significant steps to mitigate Ava’s discomfort by offering excellent training, restricting the dog from the guest suite, and offering to pay for hotel accommodations for her visits. These actions address Ava’s stated concerns regarding proximity and comfort. From a professional standpoint, the parents have acted reasonably in their attempts to compromise. The recommendation is for the parents to proceed with the adoption, as they have fulfilled their obligation to the agreement while Ava lived there, and they have offered substantial accommodations for her future visits. They should communicate clearly that while they value her comfort, they cannot allow an adult child to dictate the fundamental structure and enjoyment of their primary residence.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.






![[deleted] *I also don't think it's fully fair that she...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/18a93ae736d49dcee7fe3dd52e662535.png)
Woman, it’s not even a little fair OR required!









The parent is caught in a painful situation where their desire to fulfill the wishes of their younger daughter and husband clashes directly with the strong aversion of their older daughter regarding getting a new family dog. This conflict centers on balancing long-standing family promises and agreements against the current needs and boundaries of an independent adult child.
Given that the older daughter has moved out and the younger daughter deeply desires a pet, should the parents proceed with adopting the dog, thereby prioritizing the current household’s happiness, or should they indefinitely postpone getting a dog to prevent alienating their adult daughter during family visits?







