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Woman Cuts Ties With Abusive Family To Shield Kids As Mother-In-Law Pushes Heartbreaking Reconciliation

by Jeffrey Stone
December 2, 2025
in Social Issues

A young mom, scarred by childhood screams branding her a failure over salt and grades, cut ties with her toxic parents and grandparents over a decade ago. Relentless verbal lashings forged her iron resolve to shield her babies from the same cruelty.

Her mother-in-law, haunted by her own family regrets, pushes for one chance at reconciliation. Reddit’s torn between blood’s pull and boundary walls, debating if change is real or damage too deep to risk on innocent kids.

Woman cut ties with abusive family to protect her own children.

Woman Cuts Ties With Abusive Family To Shield Kids As Mother-In-Law Pushes Heartbreaking Reconciliation
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for refusing to give my parents a chance to know my kids because I want to break the cycle of verbal abuse?'

Growing up my parents were verbally abusive.

It was a generational thing because my mom's parents were exactly the same and apparently her grandparents were too.

It wasn't just from parent to child either but grandparent to child and grandchild too.

So I got that treatment from both of my parents and both of my maternal grandparents.

And when my mom knew she'd see her parents soon she'd be even more verbally abusive.

There was a lot of control involved in it. Do this. Do that.

And when we, because I had siblings, did it wrong or did it in a way other than how our parent or grandparent wanted us to do it,

we were useless, worthless, dumb, idiots, unintelligent, etc.

My mom and grandma were big on the whole girls need to learn homemaking early

and I was expected to cook for my family when my mom wanted nights off and she expected me to cook exactly like her without being shown.

Any mistake (like forgetting the salt) or any inconsistency (like it didn't look the same)

and I was a f__k up and any woman should know how to do those things well and I was a failure.

I struggled a lot with math and I got B's and C's in math class. That was not okay.

My dad would scream when he saw it. My mom would tell me I was only struggling

because I wasn't doing enough and that I should study math until my fingers were bleeding and my eyes were sore and dry

and if I had to, I should stay up all night and study study study. One time they cut a teacher off when she was saying

I was doing really well in math considering and they said no, don't coddle her,

she's just a lazy f__king kid and I didn't need to be praised for not really trying.

My teacher tried to explain to them that I was trying but they just verbally berated me in front of her

and told her she was wrong to acknowledge my effort. The r-word was used that night in front of my teacher that day

and after that, at least at school, I was given more supports to help me keep my grades high.

I know she reported my parents to CPS too but they didn't find verbal abuse to be good enough to intervene on I guess.

I was also called a w__re by my dad at 12 because I wore some lip-gloss a friend had put on me at school. And there's so much more.

I mean, my own grandparents called me a good example of why abortion should always exist and why it's needed.

They had something similar to say for ALL their grandkids. All of it continued until I moved out and went No Contact at 18.

My siblings all had to deal with that stuff too but while I went No Contact,

they stayed around our parents and have all repeated the cycle with their own kids.

I have stayed determined to break the cycle and one way of doing that for me is keeping them far away from me and my kids,

who are still babies right now, but I am determined to do better for my children.

My husband supports this. But my MIL lives with a lot of regret for her own NC situation with her parents and she advocates against No Contact now.

I think in her head all teens blow stuff up into being worse than it is, because she feels like she did it,

and that attempts should be made so you don't live with regret.

She has asked me what the harm is with my parents knowing my kids if I'm in the room to protect them

and I said the harm is that you can't take back what's said once it happens.

You can leave fast. But it still happened. And how many chances do you give if you try.

Because it becomes a pattern and it gets internalized by kids even if it happens infrequently.

I said it doesn't need to be contact every day or week for it to stay with you.

She talked about her feelings after her mom died and I sympathized with her but said it was different.

I know she is now stressed out that I would not try. She said she's so afraid of me walking her path.

But I have never regretted going No Contact and I see it as the ONLY way to ensure my kids are safe.

I don't trust that my parents will ever be capable of change or doing better.

And history shows that these people are not better grandparents than parents.

But I know I haven't had anything to do with my parents in over a decade now

so maybe I'm being unfair and for that reason alone, even though I feel so strongly about this, I'll ask if I'm TA for not giving them a chance.

Even half a chance by like trying to make contact one time.

This Redditor’s own bloodline came with a warning label: “Handle with care, or don’t handle at all.” This parent’s dilemma hits hard, rooted in a generational whirlwind of verbal barbs that left scars deeper than any playground scrape.

To break the cycle, she refuses grandparents even a peek at the grandkids, all to halt a legacy of name-calling, control, and soul-crushing expectations.

On one side, the OP’s ironclad no-contact stance, backed by a husband who’s all in. On the other, a mother-in-law haunted by her own regrets, pleading for a single supervised meetup. It’s like watching a tug-of-war where the rope is made of emotions.

Zooming out, the OP’s side screams protection mode. Growing up, mistakes were indictments. Forgetting salt means you’re a flop as a future homemaker. A B in math leads to cueing the yelling marathon, complete with dismissing a teacher’s kind words mid-sentence.

Even lip gloss at 12 earned a shocking slur from dad. Grandparents piled on, too, with comments so vile they’d make a sailor blush. Siblings stuck around and echoed the pattern with their own kids, but this Redditor bolted at 18 and never looked back.

She claims that words stick like glue, even if hurled rarely. One slip in front of the babies, is enough to reboot the cycle. It’s satirical how “tough love” gets rebranded as character-building, when really, it’s just emotional demolition derby.

Now let’s flip the script to the mother-in-law’s view. She cut off her parents as a teen, blew things out of proportion (in her mind), and now mourns the what-ifs after her mom’s passing.

Fair point: teens can dramatize. But here’s the rub. This isn’t moody adolescent exaggeration. CPS got involved after parents berated the kid in front of a teacher, who saw enough red flags to report. No intervention followed, but that call wasn’t made over spilled milk.

The MIL worries about future “what if I was wrong” gnawing at the OP, yet ignores the OP’s zero regrets after a decade away. Motivations are different. Hers stem from personal healing gone sour, while the OP’s from proven patterns that grandparents don’t magically soften with age.

This spirals into bigger societal ripples: intergenerational trauma is a sneaky thief robbing joy across decades. According to a 2023 report from the American Psychological Association, about 1 in 7 children experience some form of abuse or neglect, with emotional abuse often flying under the radar because it’s “just words.” Yet studies show it wires the brain for anxiety and low self-worth, lasting into adulthood.

In families like this, control masquerades as guidance, especially around gender roles: girls drilled in homemaking like it’s boot camp, boys (or in one commenter’s case) favored or resented based on parental dreams dashed.

Enter expert wisdom to ground the chaos. Clinical psychologist Laura Brown, Ph.D., director of the Fremont Community Therapy Project in Seattle, explains in a Romper interview: “An adult can goof once or twice, but the way to know it’s abusive is that it’s consistent, and the grandparent doesn’t respond to feedback from the parent about how this is not OK.”

Spot-on for our Redditor: her parents’ unchecked patterns demand recognizing the consistency of harm, not risking a sequel with the kids. Brown’s insight highlights that true protection starts with heeding proven behaviors, not assumptions of mellowed age – echoing the OP’s decade of peace post-no-contact.

Neutral ground? Test waters solo first, sans kids, with a therapist as referee if curiosity wins. But if trust is shattered glass, glue won’t hold.

Solutions: Journal the wins of no-contact, lean on supportive hubs like the husband, and maybe subtly gift MIL a book on boundaries.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many praise breaking the abuse cycle by setting firm boundaries.

StudyIcy1246 − Not the a__hole you're protecting your kids, and that’s what real cycle-breaking looks like.

Blood doesn't excuse damage. Healing starts with boundaries, and you’re setting the bar.

[Reddit User] − You are not the a__hole at all. As someone who grew up with verbal and emotional abuse from a stepdad,

I completely understand how deep those wounds go and how hard it is to undo the damage.

Breaking that cycle isn’t just a decision, it’s often a lifelong goal and an act of protection for the next generation.

You lived through years of being torn down, controlled, and made to feel worthless by the very people who were supposed to love and protect you.

Choosing to go No Contact isn’t about holding a grudge, it’s about making sure your kids never have to recover from what you went through.

Your MIL’s experience is hers, and while her regret is real, it doesn’t make your boundaries wrong.

You are doing exactly what any protective, aware, and loving parent should do keeping your kids safe before anything else!

SquareGiraffe7373 − You are protecting yourself mentally and emotionally and also your children.

Your MILs feelings about her own parents are irrelevant.

As a mother, your number one responsibility is the physical, mental and emotional safety of your children.

Definitely NTAH.

Some share personal stories of abuse to support no contact.

Professional-Duck927 − NTA. I was mistreated by my Mum because she couldn't ever get over the gender disappointment of having a 2nd son.

She resented me for denying her opportunity of having a daughter. And she didn't hide her resentment.

I was never treated equally like my brother, never shown love by her, etc. He was treated like the golden child, her pride and joy.

Meanwhile, I was treated like the random kid begging a stranger for food.

And when I became a teen, I asked her why my brother and I weren't treated the same,

and she told me that she couldn't love the boy who denied her the chance of having a daughter.

I'm now NC with her. And you want to know the ironic thing?

I have a daughter, and I've denied my 'Mum' the chance of being in her Granddaughter's life.

At the end of the day, you need to do what you feel is right for yourself and your children.

They are your family now, and they will always be your main priority.

Some warn about MIL potentially forcing reconciliation.

Nergalnerd − I don't know if you have brought it up to mil already, but I would bring up the fact that CPS did get called.

They felt comfortable enough to berate you enough in front of a teacher that they called CPS. That wasn't an anomaly that was your every day.

She may think they can change, but point out that they don't even think they are doing anything wrong.

I bet if you reached out to them they wouldn't even apologize and would just say they were trying to toughen you up.

VictoryShaft − Just stay on guard with your MIL. From the sound of your post,

I would not put it past her to set up a "reunion" for you to talk out your differences with your "family".

I hope I'm wrong, but it sounds like she's going to try to "fix" your situation. Updateme.

Others accuse MIL of projecting and advise strong responses.

SoleSun314 − NTA and your MIL should stop projecting. Her situation was her situation, yours is yours.

Your family is full of abusive ah and you are right not to want them around your children and yourself.

It was not "just" verbal abuse from what you say, it was all kind of abuse except physical. Keeping your children far away it's the right choice.

As much as I have a strong concept of family, nobody has the right to continue abusing people.

All this being said... I don't know if it's even possible, but if it is, you could try and obtain the CPS records of your teacher's report.

Since they are about you and you're an adult now, maybe you can access them.

So you can show them to your MIL and ask her if she's still adamant that her grandchildren be in the presence of people

who do that kind of things in front of a third person who is also a teacher thus a mandatory report If you can't...

Ask her why HER regrets are more important than her grandchildren's safety.

Sharp_Magician_6628 − Tell your MIL “I’m sorry you regret going no contact with your family.

I don’t, and never will. I refuse to allow my parents and grandparents abuse my children like I was.

If you can’t respect my decision, then I will be reevaluating your place in our children’s lives as well. Abuse should never be tolerated.

My parents failed me, my teachers failed me, CPS failed me. I will NOT fail my children.

I am breaking the cycle of abused and you have a problem with it? Stay away from our family”

You need to be very blunt here, there can be no room for interpretation. She needs to understand in no uncertain terms that this is up for debate.

And your husband needs to back you up

A comment emphasizes protecting mental health and involving the husband.

COgrace − NTA. It's going to impact you to be around them too. Your kids will start to notice that. It's very toxic.

Keep away from them for sake of your mental heath, and for your children.

Time for DH to have a talk with MIL about how it's absolutely none of her business,

and thank her for sharing her insight, tell her it's under consideration (even when it's not), a

nd should she keep bringing it up she could compromise her relationship with her grandchildren.

Should she bring it up after that, end any visit or activity immediately.

This Redditor’s fortress of no-contact stands as a beacon for cycle-breakers everywhere: protecting tiny hearts from echoes of yesterday’s hurts.

Her MIL’s regrets add a poignant twist, but prioritizing kids’ safety over “what ifs” feels like parental superhero stuff.

Do you think locking the door forever is fair when a decade’s passed, or does one guarded coffee chat deserve a shot?

How would you navigate a spouse’s family pushing for reconciliation in this verbal minefield? Drop your thoughts, we’re all ears!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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