He carries the weight of a loving family close by—parents and siblings bonded through countless shared moments—while his fiancée navigates the void left by the loss of her own parents and the absence of siblings. Their worlds, shaped by vastly different experiences of family, now collide in the delicate dance of building a future together.
As they dream of children and holiday traditions, the tension between blood ties and chosen family ignites a raw emotional struggle. Each desires to honor their roots, yet their visions of connection and belonging threaten to pull them apart, exposing the deep scars and fragile hopes that lie beneath their love.

AITAH for expecting my fiance (33F) to prioritize my (31M) family for the holidays, given that hers is dead?








Dr. Harriet Lerner, a renowned psychologist known for her work on family dynamics and boundaries, often stresses the importance of clearly defined, mutually respected family structures. In this scenario, the conflict centers on defining what constitutes ‘immediate family’ for crucial holidays, which carries significant emotional weight, especially for someone who experienced early parental loss.
The fiancé’s behavior—visiting her ‘chosen family’ every two months for several days, often traveling seven hours—indicates a profound investment in this relationship structure, likely serving as a compensatory mechanism for the early loss of her parents. The fiancé perceives the demand to alternate or forgo time with this chosen family during major holidays as a devaluation of this core support system. Conversely, the partner’s reaction, labeling her desire as ‘selfish’ and tying it directly to her bereavement, crosses a boundary by weaponizing her past trauma against her current relational needs. This communication pattern creates a power imbalance where one person’s needs (traditional biological family continuity) are framed as inherently more valid than the other’s (emotional continuity with chosen support).
The partner’s approach was counterproductive; directly attacking the fiancé’s feelings about her chosen family rather than seeking a compromise exacerbates the distance. For future resolution, the couple must move beyond assigning blame. A constructive recommendation involves validating both sets of needs: acknowledging the fiancé’s need for her chosen family connection while also acknowledging the partner’s desire for local family traditions. They could explore creating new, hybrid traditions that incorporate elements from both sides, or agree to alternate major holidays in a structured, non-judgmental way, ensuring that the chosen family receives dedicated, quality time without making the fiancé feel she must choose between her partner and her chosen support system.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.

The callous way you speak about the lack of living biological family she has, and how ‘that’s not your fault’ whilst you simultaneously devalue not only the role of the chosen family she has spent that time with.


‘The lesbian couple have their own kids and 2 grandkids. No need to impose on their holiday’
She wasn’t imposing she was invited.











The fiancé is currently feeling distant and hurt because her deeply held need for connection with her chosen family during significant holidays conflicts directly with her partner’s firm expectation that their future children prioritize his biological family for major holidays.
Given the fiancé’s history of early loss and the value she places on her chosen family, should the couple prioritize maintaining the emotional fulfillment found in these non-biological bonds, or is the partner correct in asserting that immediate biological family traditions must take precedence for their children’s formative holiday experiences?







