A 25-year-old woman (OP) and her 31-year-old husband have been trying to conceive for five years and are now expecting their baby at 36 weeks. While finalizing her birth plan with her doctor, the OP discussed her wishes for a private delivery, intending for only herself and her husband to be present with the midwife.
The OP’s mother-in-law (MIL) overheard this discussion and became increasingly upset when told she would not be present during the birth. After repeated assertions of the OP’s boundary, the OP left to stay with her sister. Two weeks later, the husband continues to insist the OP is being selfish by excluding his mother, leading the OP to question her marriage just before delivery.

Am I the AH for telling my husband that his mom can watch me give birth if my mom gets to watch him have his prostate exam


















As renowned relationship expert Dr. John Gottman explains, “The single most important thing we can do to change other people is to change the way we react to them.” In this situation, the OP is dealing with a clear boundary violation initiated by her mother-in-law and not being adequately supported by her husband, which escalated her reaction to an extreme counter-proposal (the prostate exam analogy).
The OP’s desire for a private birth, free from observers whom she does not feel comfortable with during intense vulnerability, is psychologically sound and should be respected by her partner. The husband’s prioritization of his mother’s ‘experience’ over his wife’s comfort and autonomy during labor suggests a significant issue with triangulation and co-dependency. The OP’s analogy, while emotionally charged and designed to shock her husband into understanding, unfortunately shifted the focus from her valid boundary to a perceived personal attack, derailing constructive communication.
The OP’s action of temporarily leaving was a necessary, though drastic, measure to enforce a boundary when it was being dismissed. Moving forward, professional couples counseling, ideally before the birth, is strongly recommended to establish unified decision-making power between the OP and her husband. The immediate constructive recommendation is for the husband to unequivocally support his wife’s birth plan now, and for them to discuss managing future family expectations with a trained third party.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.





















The central conflict revolves around the OP’s fundamental need for privacy and control during a highly vulnerable medical event versus the strong emotional expectations and perceived entitlement of her husband and mother-in-law regarding participation in the birth experience.
The OP utilized a provocative counter-example involving an invasive medical exam to illustrate her point about privacy, which caused immediate conflict. The core question remains whether the OP should compromise her deeply held boundary for the sake of marital harmony immediately before labor, or if her husband needs to validate her bodily autonomy to ensure they can support each other during the birth.







