In the fragile glow of new parenthood, a man grapples with the delicate balance between comfort and commitment. The birth of their baby girl has shifted the landscape of their nights, where once the warmth of two loyal dogs filled their shared bed, now space is fraught with tension and unspoken needs. His heart aches with the desire to stay close, yet he clings to the familiar solace only his canine companions can provide.
Caught between his wife’s unease and his own restless spirit, he proposes a compromise born of love and practicality—a separate room, a baby monitor bridging the gap. Yet this gesture is met with a quiet storm, a poignant accusation that he chooses the dogs over her. In this tender moment, their love is tested, revealing the raw vulnerability and complex emotions that weave through the early chapters of their family’s story.

AITAH for wanting to sleep with my dogs rather than my wife while she is nursing our baby





As noted by Dr. Gail Saltz, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College, major life transitions like childbirth often trigger shifts in established relationship dynamics and require renegotiation of physical and emotional space. The introduction of a newborn fundamentally alters the dyadic relationship of the parents.
The husband’s behavior reflects a strong attachment to his dogs, treating them as necessary emotional supports (e.g., ‘giant teddy bears’). However, in the postpartum period, the mother requires primary physical and emotional security, and sleep disruption is a severe stressor. The husband’s proposed solution attempts to maintain his comfort (sleeping with the dogs) while offering support (baby monitor setup). The wife’s reaction—feeling he is ‘choosing the dogs over her’—suggests she perceives this as a failure to prioritize her immediate needs for physical closeness, help, and partnership during a vulnerable time. The dynamic involves emotional labor: she is currently laboring physically and emotionally, and his need for dog comfort is being perceived as adding burden rather than alleviating it.
While the husband’s intention to help with night duties is commendable, suggesting sleeping in a separate room entirely, even with a monitor, can create a feeling of abandonment or distance for the recovering mother. A more appropriate initial approach would be to temporarily adjust his sleep arrangement to be in the same room as his wife and child, perhaps on the floor or in a secondary sleeping surface if the bed is too crowded, thus signaling total commitment to the shared immediate care unit. Future negotiation regarding the dogs can wait until the wife is more recovered.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.





This is part of being a parent. Snuggly dogs go somewhere else now. Be there for your wife and child.





The husband is caught between his deep emotional need for the comfort of his long-time pets and his commitment to supporting his wife immediately after childbirth. This situation highlights a direct conflict between his established personal habits and the new, urgent needs of his partner and infant.
Given the recent birth and the need for maternal recovery and bonding, is the husband’s proposed arrangement of sleeping separately with the dogs a reasonable compromise for support, or does his insistence on keeping the dogs in bed with him fundamentally misread the priority of his wife’s immediate physical and emotional needs?







