At twenty-four, he believed he understood his parents’ marriage—a solid, conventional bond spanning over three decades. But a chance discovery of explicit messages on his mother’s phone shattered that illusion, revealing a hidden world of swinger parties and open relationships that challenged everything he thought he knew about love and loyalty.
As the shock settled, he confronted his mother, seeking answers in the quiet aftermath of his discovery. Her candid admission that their unconventional lifestyle had strengthened their marriage forced him to grapple with complex emotions, questioning the boundaries of trust, acceptance, and the true nature of commitment.

AITA for being upset that my parents are swingers?













Dr. Terri Cole, a licensed psychotherapist specializing in boundaries, often emphasizes that while adults are entitled to their lifestyle choices, those choices can inevitably impact close family relationships, especially when they defy established norms. The key issue here is the violation of the son’s internal narrative rather than a direct offense against him.
The 24-year-old male is experiencing what can be termed ‘narrative dissonance’ or ‘cognitive dissonance’—a conflict between his deeply held schema of his parents as conventional role models and the new, shocking reality of their consensual non-monogamous lifestyle. His reaction of shock, withdrawal, and feeling ‘betrayed’ stems from the loss of his idealized perception, not necessarily from the act of swinging itself. The parents’ reaction, while claiming openness, may be minimizing the emotional impact on their adult child by immediately shutting down the discussion (‘it’s none of my business’), which can feel invalidating and heighten the son’s sense of alienation.
The son’s behavior of becoming distant is an understandable, albeit potentially damaging, coping mechanism for processing trauma to his established relational framework. Moving forward, both parties need better communication. The son should seek support to process his feelings of disillusionment independently, while the parents could benefit from acknowledging the difficulty of this revelation for their son, rather than defensively asserting their right to privacy. A constructive recommendation for the son is to communicate his need for space to process without judgment, focusing on ‘I feel’ statements rather than accusations regarding their choices.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.














if they are both consenting adults doing what they like i dont see it as unhealthy, you dont have to swing if you dont like it, but they dont have to be monogamous just because it bothers you.



It’s literally nunya business. You ARE overreacting. People have sex. That’s a part of life. That doesn’t seem to have made them bad parents. Their relationships are theirs, yours is yours.
The individual is experiencing significant emotional distress, feeling betrayed and as if their foundational understanding of their parents’ marriage has been shattered. The central conflict lies between the parents’ assertion of autonomy and the son’s deeply ingrained expectations of what a long-term, conventional marriage should entail.
Given the clash between the son’s need for emotional processing and the parents’ insistence that their private lifestyle is non-negotiable, the core question remains: When adult children uncover fundamental truths about their parents’ private lives that contradict long-held beliefs, to what extent are the children justified in their emotional reaction, and where should the boundary lie between parental privacy and the child’s need for relational alignment?







