A young Navy Corpsman finds himself torn between duty and heartache as his premature daughter fights for life in the NICU. Stationed with a Marine unit deep in the field, he faces the unbearable weight of being the sole medical support, unable to leave as his family faces a crisis miles away.
With only days left in a grueling two-week training exercise, he battles the agony of separation, knowing that leaving would jeopardize his comrades’ safety. His heart aches with every passing moment, trapped between the call of service and the desperate need to be by his newborn’s side.

AITA for missing my daughter’s birth even though my girlfriend wasn’t due,













As renowned family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner states, “When we try to get other people to behave the way we want them to, we rarely succeed in changing them, but we almost always succeed in damaging the relationship.” This situation highlights a catastrophic failure in managing expectations under duress, driven by high emotional stakes on one side and rigid structural constraints on the other.
The OP is caught in a ‘no-win’ situation defined by institutional hierarchy. His role as the sole Corpsman during a live-fire training exercise places him in a critical operational slot; leaving would constitute Unauthorized Absence (UA), risking severe career repercussions like Non-Judicial Punishment (NJP), which directly threatens his ability to support his family long-term. His motivation to stay is rooted in responsible long-term planning and professional duty. Conversely, his girlfriend and her father are reacting from a place of acute emotional trauma—the premature birth and NICU stay—where immediate physical presence is perceived as the only true measure of commitment. The father’s aggressive language reflects a generational or cultural expectation that paternal duty trumps institutional demands in moments of crisis.
The OP’s actions regarding seeking permission were appropriate within the military structure; he followed the correct chain of command. However, communication in the interim was likely insufficient. A constructive recommendation is that upon being denied immediate leave, the OP should have proactively arranged scheduled, frequent video calls (if possible) or designated specific times for updates, and explicitly communicated to his command the need for his girlfriend to receive confirmation that he *was* trying to secure release. Upon his return next week, he must prioritize validating his girlfriend’s feelings of abandonment over defending his professional choices, focusing first on emotional reconnection before explaining the logistics of his necessary absence.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.























The original poster (OP) faces a severe conflict between his professional military obligations and his deep personal desire to support his girlfriend and newborn daughter during a medical emergency. His command requires him to remain in the field due to essential medical coverage duties, leaving him unable to immediately attend the premature birth, which has caused significant emotional distress and accusations of abandonment from his partner and her father.
Given the mandatory nature of his role as the sole Corpsman during critical training and the severe professional consequences of leaving, was the OP’s adherence to duty the only responsible path, or did the immediate needs of his new family outweigh the operational requirements of his military commitment?







