Picture a cramped house buzzing with seven kids, where a teen shares a room with a toddler while a late daughter’s bedroom sits untouched as a shrine.
That’s the tense reality for a Redditor (M) who, five years into blending families, asked his wife to clear out their late daughter Mel’s belongings to free up space for his daughter Lola.
With two “ours” babies adding to the chaos, the Redditor argues it’s time to reallocate rooms, but his wife and stepdaughter Molly cling to Mel’s memory, sparking a family feud. Is he callous, or is fairness overdue?
The Redditor’s push for change has painted him as the villain, but is he wrong to prioritize living kids’ needs?


Blending families is tough, but add a child’s death and a cramped house, and it’s a recipe for conflict. The Redditor wants to move Mel’s belongings, four years after her passing, to give his 12-year-old daughter Lola relief from sharing a small room with a toddler, soon two.
His wife and stepdaughter Molly resist, preserving Mel’s large downstairs bedroom as a memorial. Reddit’s divided, but is he the asshole, or is grief clouding fairness?
The Redditor’s logic is practical: five kids sharing two small bedrooms and one bathroom, while Molly has a large room and private bathroom, is unsustainable.
Lola, nearly a teen, faces disrupted sleep and no privacy, a concern backed by a 2024 study from the Journal of Child Psychology, which notes that teens in overcrowded homes report higher stress and lower academic performance.
His plan aligns with the original agreement, Lola and Molly sharing once Mel left for college, making Molly’s solo room an unintended privilege. The addition of two “ours” babies, though unplanned, exacerbates the space crunch, amplifying the need for change.
Yet, his wife and Molly’s resistance is rooted in profound loss. Keeping Mel’s room untouched is a common grief response, as psychologist Dr. Alan Wolfelt explains in a 2025 Psychology Today article: “Preserving a deceased child’s space can feel like preserving their presence”.
Forcing the issue risks alienating them, especially Molly, who lost her sister at 12. The Redditor’s timing, four years out, seems reasonable, but his approach, framed as fairness, may feel dismissive to their pain.
Reddit’s suggestion of moving houses or boxing up Mel’s items sensitively could bridge the gap. This situation underscores the challenge of balancing grief with a growing family’s needs.
The Redditor could propose a compromise: pack Mel’s belongings with Molly’s input, preserving key items for display, and slowly transition the room. Grief counseling, as Reddit suggests, could help his wife process the change.
A family meeting to discuss everyone’s needs, Lola’s privacy, Molly’s loss, might ease tensions. Forcing the issue without empathy risks fracturing the family further.
Readers, what’s your take? Is the Redditor heartless for pushing to clear Mel’s room, or is he right to demand fairness for Lola? How do you balance a family’s grief with practical needs?
These are the responses from Reddit users:
Reddit is split, labeling the poster YTA, ESH, or NAH for wanting to repurpose their late stepdaughter’s bedroom space, against their wife’s wish to keep it as a shrine.
YTA/ESH critics slam the couple for having seven kids in a cramped three-bedroom house, urging them to stop reproducing and house toddlers themselves, not burden their 12-year-old, Lola.
NTA/NAH supporters sympathize with the wife’s grief but say it shouldn’t harm living kids. Suggestions include storing Mel’s belongings, moving houses, or grief counseling.

The consensus pushes for balancing grief with the kids’ needs through communication and practical solutions.

This Redditor’s plea for bedroom fairness has ignited a family feud, pitting his daughter’s needs against his wife’s and stepdaughter’s grief. Asking to clear Mel’s room four years after her death feels practical, but is it callous?
With kids crammed in tight spaces and emotions running high, should he have pushed harder for empathy, or is his stand for Lola justified? How would you navigate a blended family’s grief and space crunch? Share your thoughts below!








