The original poster (OP) and his wife have been married for ten years and together for twelve, sharing two children. They developed a very close relationship with the OP’s sister-in-law (SIL), Jenna, after her husband passed away seven years prior. The OP, his wife, and their children provided significant emotional and practical support to Jenna and her daughter, resulting in a tight-knit family connection.
A few months ago, while intoxicated, Jenna confessed to the OP that she had developed romantic feelings for him. Following this confession, Jenna became very upset, and the OP’s wife subsequently kicked Jenna out of their home. The wife expressed long-held suspicions and felt betrayed, leading to a decision to cut off all contact, which the OP agreed to, including blocking Jenna. Now, the OP is feeling that the complete cutoff is too harsh, especially for his niece, and his attempts to advocate for sympathy have caused significant distress to his wife, leaving him questioning if he was wrong.

AITAH for telling my wife to stop treating her sister so badly after her sister confessed to having feelings for me



















According to Dr. Kendall Wood, a specialist in relational dynamics, “When navigating crises involving infidelity or boundary violations within a close family unit, the primary alliance—in this case, the marriage—must be prioritized, even when addressing the needs of secondary relationships.”
The OP’s initial agreement to cease contact with Jenna was a necessary step to support his wife’s immediate emotional safety following the confession. However, his subsequent attempts to re-engage with the niece, while motivated by care, undermined the boundary his wife had established as a consequence of Jenna’s actions. By pressing his wife to sympathize with Jenna—especially by using the extreme hypothetical of his own death—the OP inadvertently shifted focus away from his wife’s current pain and onto the feelings of the person who created the conflict. This can be interpreted by the hurt partner as minimizing their trauma.
The expert recommendation here is for the OP to halt direct advocacy for Jenna and focus entirely on validating his wife’s feelings of betrayal and hurt for the immediate future. While maintaining contact with the niece is important, it should be discussed and agreed upon by the wife first, perhaps through mediated, low-contact interactions, rather than being unilaterally pushed by the OP as a matter of fairness to the niece.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.

























The original poster finds himself caught between his desire to maintain a bond with his grieving niece and his wife’s deep feeling of betrayal stemming from Jenna’s romantic confession toward him. The central conflict is balancing compassion for the sister-in-law and niece against the need to validate and respect his wife’s emotional boundaries after a significant personal violation.
The question remains whether the OP was out of line for pushing his wife to show sympathy and consider Jenna’s perspective, thereby invalidating his wife’s hurt feelings, or if his actions were justified in seeking to protect the extended family relationship with his niece. Was the OP wrong to bring up the devastating scenario of his own death to prompt empathy from his wife?







