The original poster (OP) and his wife recently learned they were expecting their first child shortly after the OP’s father lost his wife of 20 years. Following this news, the OP’s father and his teenage half-siblings strongly expected the OP to name the new baby after the deceased stepmother, either as a first or middle name. The father even suggested using a masculine version of the name if the baby was a boy, seeing the pregnancy as a gift from his late wife.
The OP immediately informed his father that they were not considering the deceased woman’s name or anything similar. This refusal caused tension, leading the OP and his wife to distance themselves from his father and half-siblings, whose anger over the decision has remained intense. As the birth approaches, the OP has firmly stated that the naming decision is final and not open for further discussion, leading to increased anger and criticism from his father and half-siblings, making the OP question if he was wrong to be so absolute in his rejection.

AITA for making it absolutely clear my wife and I are not naming our child after my dad’s late wife who died a few months ago?

















As licensed marriage and family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner notes regarding personal space and relationship dynamics, “The opposite of self-sacrifice is not selfishness; it’s self-support.” This principle strongly applies here, as the OP is exercising self-support by prioritizing his immediate family’s autonomy—his wife and unborn child—over the emotional demands of his father.
The father and half-siblings are attempting to manage their grief by externalizing their expectations onto the OP’s personal decision regarding his child. They view the naming choice as a required commemorative act, confusing personal remembrance with familial obligation. The OP’s firm stance is psychologically sound because the deceased woman, while related by marriage, was not the OP’s mother, and the OP explicitly stated he was not fond of her. Imposing such a significant, permanent marker based on a secondary relationship is an inappropriate boundary violation. However, the OP’s decision to honor his actual mother with a subtle name choice, while understandable from his perspective, creates a secondary conflict, as the father is likely to perceive this alternate tribute as a deliberate snub rather than an act of personal honoring.
The OP’s action to be firm was appropriate in establishing a necessary boundary against an unreasonable demand; however, the intensity of the family’s reaction suggests that communication leading up to the final declaration could have been handled with more focus on validating the father’s grief while simultaneously reinforcing ownership over the decision. Moving forward, the OP should prioritize direct, calm communication with his father about his own values (honoring his biological mother) rather than focusing solely on rejecting the father’s wishes.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.




























The core conflict revolves around the OP’s right to autonomy over his child’s name versus his father’s desire to use the naming convention as a tool for grief processing and honoring his late wife’s memory. The OP feels justified in honoring his actual mother instead, even covertly, while his father perceives the OP’s firmness and rejection of his wife’s name as deeply insensitive and disrespectful, especially given the timing of the death and the pregnancy.
The debate centers on whether the OP’s absolute firmness in rejecting the requested name, even with a privately chosen alternative honoring his biological mother, was an overreaction that unnecessarily escalated family conflict, or if the father’s expectation constituted an inappropriate imposition on the OP’s family unit. Should the OP have handled the initial request differently, or was firm denial the only appropriate response to an unreasonable demand?







