The original poster (OP), a 37-year-old father, described an interaction between his 14-year-old son, Sonny, and his 37-year-old wife regarding Sonny’s crush on a classmate named Chris (14F). The wife had previously questioned Sonny about his interest in Chris, learning that Sonny kept his feelings a secret because he feared his friends would tease him due to Chris being described as the heaviest girl in their grade with poor skin and a tomboy appearance.
The situation escalated when the wife, while Sonny had friends and several girls over, suddenly announced to Chris in the living room that Sonny had a significant crush on her. This caused Chris to leave immediately, and the gathering ended early, with Sonny reacting by slamming doors later that night. When the OP confronted his wife, calling her a jerk for her actions, she defended herself by claiming she was trying to stop Sonny from potentially becoming a bully, leading to the couple sleeping separately and the OP questioning if he was in the wrong.

AITA for calling my wife a jerk for telling our son’s crush that our son likes her in front of his friends ?









As family therapist and author Nedra Glover Tawwab states, ‘Boundaries aren’t about controlling other people; they are about knowing what is acceptable for you and what you will do if someone crosses that line.’ This situation highlights a severe boundary violation, not just between the parents regarding parenting decisions, but more critically, a violation of the son’s privacy and social standing.
The wife’s motivation—to prevent her son from engaging in bullying behavior—is ostensibly positive, aligning with teaching empathy. However, her method of execution—publicly announcing the crush—was deeply flawed. This action placed immense social pressure on Sonny and caused severe public humiliation for Chris, potentially teaching both children that airing private emotional matters publicly is acceptable. Sonny’s reaction (slamming doors) signifies a breach in trust and an explosion of suppressed frustration, while Chris’s immediate departure demonstrates clear distress.
The OP’s reaction calling his wife a ‘jerk’ was an immediate emotional response to witnessing the fallout, but it was unlikely to foster productive dialogue. A more constructive approach for the parents would have been to discuss privacy expectations and social sensitivity privately before taking any action. Moving forward, they need to establish clear ground rules for discussing their children’s private lives and focus on teaching empathy through modeling respectful communication, rather than direct, high-stakes intervention.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.



















The central conflict revolves around the mother’s attempt to intervene publicly in her son’s secret romantic feelings, which resulted in extreme embarrassment and distress for all the teenagers involved. The OP is struggling with whether his direct criticism of his wife’s methods was justified, especially when she argues her intentions were rooted in preventing cruelty toward Chris.
Did the wife cross a significant boundary by exposing her son’s secret to his crush in front of his peers, or was her action a misguided but ultimately compassionate attempt to encourage honesty and prevent potential future bullying? Is the OP correct to label her actions as being a ‘jerk,’ or was his reaction overly harsh given her stated, albeit poorly executed, intentions?







