The original poster (OP) shares custody of his 7-year-old daughter, Zara, with his ex-partner, with whom he has a strictly co-parenting relationship due to past issues, including infidelity by the ex. When Zara’s Christmas birthday approached, the OP purchased 20 gifts for her, alongside gifts from his brother and the ex. The ex, facing financial strain, requested that the OP allow them to spend Christmas together as a whole family unit, framing it as Zara’s wish.
Although Zara agreed to the visit only if her half-brother did not interfere with her belongings, the situation escalated immediately upon the ex and her son arriving. Upon seeing the large number of presents intended only for Zara, the ex became angry, demanding that the OP’s daughter share her gifts with her son. When the OP refused to force his daughter to share her presents, the ex reacted with verbal abuse, accusing him of malice. The OP is now questioning if he was wrong for prioritizing his daughter’s gifts and enforcing her boundaries over his ex’s demands.

AlTA for refusing to share my daughter’s 27 Christmas gifts with her half-brother who got 1.
























According to Dr. Emerson Powell, a specialist in social ethics, “Boundaries established between a parent and child regarding personal property are sacred and should not be overridden by the emotional or financial distress of an unrelated party, especially when those boundaries are explicitly accepted as a condition for cooperation.”
The OP acted appropriately in prioritizing the agreement made with his daughter. The ex’s behavior can be analyzed through the lens of entitlement and projection. By expecting the OP to subsidize or share gifts intended solely for his child, the ex was attempting to manage her own financial shortfall using the OP’s generosity, and her subsequent rage demonstrated an inability to cope when that expectation was denied. Her accusations of cruelty are likely projection, aiming to reframe the OP’s defense of his daughter as an attack on her son.
The OP correctly identified and enforced Zara’s boundary regarding her half-brother, which was the prerequisite for allowing the joint Christmas morning. While forcing the ex’s son to watch someone else open gifts can be emotionally difficult for any child, the responsibility for managing that emotional fallout rests primarily with his own mother. The path forward for the OP should involve minimizing non-essential interactions with the ex and maintaining firm, clear communication strictly about custody logistics, reinforcing that Zara’s personal property is not communal.
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The OP is facing a conflict between honoring the specific boundaries set with his daughter regarding her personal property and managing the volatile reaction of his narcissistic ex-partner during a shared holiday. While the OP feels some guilt that the situation negatively impacted the ex’s son, his primary justification rests on fulfilling his promise to Zara and protecting her possessions from interference.
The central debate revolves around the allocation of resources and emotional expectations during a holiday visit arranged primarily for the child’s benefit. Should the OP have anticipated and accommodated the ex’s financial difficulties by sharing Zara’s gifts, or was he entirely justified in upholding his daughter’s established boundaries against an unreasonable demand made by the visiting parent?







