In a home meant to be a sanctuary of love and support, tension has quietly taken root. The narrator’s small family, intertwined with the lives of his wife and sister-in-law, struggles under the weight of an unwelcome presence—a friend whose reckless disregard for boundaries threatens the peace they cherish.
The breaking point came when carelessness crossed a sacred line: a drunken visitor, ignoring simple hygiene, reached out to a fragile infant. In that charged moment, the family’s patience shattered, revealing the raw, protective instinct that binds them together against the intrusion of chaos.

Aita for backing my sil up and kicking my wife’s friend out of house for touching my niece














As renowned family therapist Dr. Terrence Real explains, “When we feel unsafe, we look for control. We try to regulate other people because we can’t regulate ourselves.” In this scenario, the friend exhibited behavior (appearing drunk, poor hygiene around infants) that directly threatened the safety of the children, making the OP’s desire to remove her presence a protective, albeit extreme, reaction aimed at regaining control over the household environment.
The core issue lies in how the boundary was enforced. While the SIL and OP were unified in asking the friend to leave due to her recklessness and subsequent malicious texting, the OP’s ultimatum concerning divorce shifted the focus from the friend’s wrongdoing to the wife’s perceived loyalty. This is a common pattern where one partner uses an extreme threat to bypass necessary, nuanced communication, creating emotional distance. The friend’s toxic behavior (gaslighting/sowing discord via text) validated the need to end the friendship, but the OP’s method of ensuring compliance by threatening divorce was inappropriate, as it placed undue pressure on the marital partnership.
The OP’s actions regarding the friend were understandable given the safety risk and the friend’s betrayal, but introducing divorce as leverage was counterproductive to marital harmony, as evidenced by the ensuing argument. For future situations, the constructive recommendation is to first establish a unified front with the spouse regarding the unacceptable external behavior. If the spouse hesitates to sever ties after a serious breach of trust (like the drunk incident or malicious texting), the OP should initiate a discussion about the *level* of commitment to the marriage based on shared safety and respect, rather than presenting an immediate, unilateral ultimatum tied to the external conflict.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.

















The original poster (OP) is clearly distressed by a friend’s dangerous and disrespectful behavior toward their family, leading to a firm confrontation where the friend was asked to leave. However, the conflict escalated when the OP introduced the threat of divorce to enforce their boundary regarding the friendship, causing significant marital strain despite the friend’s unacceptable actions.
Was the OP justified in using the threat of divorce to demand the immediate termination of his wife’s friendship, or did this ultimatum unfairly pressure his wife and undermine their marital trust regarding an issue primarily caused by the friend? This situation forces a balance between protecting the household from a hazard and respecting the autonomy within the marriage.







