Two years into a marriage shadowed by prejudice, a young woman faces the harsh reality of her family’s deep-seated racism. Despite a love that blossomed over four years, her Korean husband has never been accepted by her own blood, mocked for his heritage and appearance, a cruel reminder that love often struggles against the weight of ignorance.
The arrival of their daughter, meant to be a moment of joy and unity, instead exposes the bitter fractures within the family. Fear and hatred disguised as concern have driven a wedge so wide that even the innocent eyes of a newborn become targets of scorn, leaving a mother to grapple with betrayal and the painful silence of those who should have embraced her most.

AITA for telling my mother and siblings that they are now dead to me?














As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a severe breach of emotional and ethical boundaries, where the family’s expressed racism and cruelty forced the OP to establish an extreme boundary for self-preservation and the protection of her daughter.
The OP’s family exhibited clear patterns of prejudice, first targeting her husband based on race and then extending that hostility to her infant daughter. The mother’s manipulation tactics (crying, claiming entitlement to access) and the sister’s use of a racial slur indicate a deep-seated disrespect for the OP’s choices and her new family unit. The fear cited by the sister regarding the virus appears to be a pretext, given the established history of racial bias, suggesting the core conflict is rooted in discrimination rather than public health concerns.
The OP’s decision to immediately block and sever contact, while emotionally intense, was an appropriate defense mechanism against active hostility. Constructively, while establishing this firm boundary was necessary, maintaining a ‘no contact’ stance indefinitely may require future re-evaluation based on whether the family shows genuine remorse and takes tangible steps to address their racist behavior. For now, prioritizing the psychological safety of her child and husband justifies the immediate isolation from toxic influences.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.

















The original poster (OP) has reached a breaking point due to persistent racist comments and hostility from her family toward her husband and now her newborn daughter. Her actions—refusing entry and severing all contact—represent a definitive move to protect her immediate nuclear family from harmful behavior, directly challenging the family’s perceived right to access her child despite their past and present mistreatment.
The core question is whether cutting off all communication and support from her biological family is a justified defense mechanism against racism and abuse, or an excessively harsh reaction that permanently forfeits the right to familial connection. Should the OP prioritize her child’s well-being and her own peace over maintaining any relationship with family members who have demonstrated prejudice?







