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Man Refuses To Let Mom’s Boyfriend Parent Him, And Family Turns On Him

by Layla Bui
December 3, 2025
in Social Issues

Grief is a powerful emotion, and for some, it can make even the smallest changes feel overwhelming. Losing a parent leaves a hole that can feel irreplaceable, especially when someone else steps in to try and fill that gap. When a mother’s new boyfriend starts stepping into the role of authority, it’s natural for a grieving child to feel uncomfortable.

This Redditor, a 23-year-old college student, is struggling with the idea of his mom’s boyfriend taking on a fatherly role in his life. Despite his mom’s happiness, he feels like his boundaries are being pushed, from curfews to rules about sharing his personal belongings.

Read on to find out how this tension played out when the boyfriend crossed a line, and whether the Redditor’s reaction was justified.

When a man stood up to his mom’s boyfriend, it set off a family feud

Man Refuses To Let Mom's Boyfriend Parent Him, And Family Turns On Him
not the actual photo

'AITA for asking moms boyfriend to stop trying to parent me?'

My dad died suddenly about a year ago, and my mom found this really nice guy that she’s started seeing.

I’m 23M and going into my final year of college. My moms boyfriend has two daughters ages 15 and 13.

My mom has stepped in to be a mother figure to them,

and the boyfriend has stepped into my extended family becoming everyone’s favourite uncle.

And while I’m glad everyone else is comfortable, I’m not.

He isn’t a bad guy, I’m just still grieving my father, and it feels like he’s trying to replace him.

He tries to set rules for me, things like chores and curfew, that my dad specifically didn’t because he thought they were ridiculous for an adult.

Boyfriend thinks it’s only fair because i have siblings now. I think it’s ridiculous to have the same rules apply because of our age differences.

He’s trying to get me to share my stuff with his kids. They aren’t lacking for anything but he thinks it’s only fair because family.

I live in the basement of my mom's house. I have since I was 15.

When you come in the front door there’s a door to the basement and the stairs to go into the house. So it’s pretty separate.

So last night I was DDing for some friends and got home at 2 am.

I had nothing to do until 3pm today since classes aren’t until next week and my new job starts in 2 weeks.

So this has never been a big deal with my parents. I shot my mom a text and went to bed.

Tonight though, man, boyfriend flipped. I got a lecture and sent to my room and “possible loss of car privileges.”

I snapped and laid it out for him. I told him i’m leaving the city after I graduate.

I told him I’m glad my mom found a new partner but that I am not and will not be looking for a new father figure and he needs to...

I told him our relationship won’t be father/son for some time, and that he needs to respect me

as an adult or that I won’t want to have a relationship with him. He told my family and they think i’m the a__hole. AITA?

EDIT: THE BOYFRIEND DOESN'T LIVE WITH US AND DOESN'T PAY RENT OR BILLS.

HIM AND HIS DAUGHTES SPEND TIME HERE AND PAY ONLY FOR THEIR FOOD: SOMETHING I DO AS WELL

When a family reshapes, through loss, new relationships, or remarriage, it doesn’t just change legal or daily‑life status. It transforms emotional dynamics, loyalties, and the sense of belonging.

In this situation, the son’s grief over losing his father is still active, and the arrival of his mom’s new partner represents more than just added adult company: it signals to him a potential loss of what remains of his original family stability.

Research on blended families shows this kind of tension is common. When children (especially adult or near‑adult children) face a stepparent who enters too quickly or assumes parental authority, they may feel a sense of intrusion or betrayal.

A qualitative study published in 2023 examined what happens when a parent remarries soon after losing a long-term partner. Many adult children reported emotional distress, difficulty adjusting, and a sense of loyalty conflict.

Expert guidance for stepfamily transitions recommends clearly defined boundaries, open communication, and gradual adjustment, especially when children are old enough to have established adult identity or independence.

In that light, the son’s request to the boyfriend, “please don’t parent me,” is not just adolescent rebellion. It’s a legitimate attempt to preserve his sense of autonomy, identity, and the memory of his father. For many adult children, an abrupt shift in household authority can feel destabilizing.

According to a mental‑health resource on blended families, successful integration involves respect: allowing each member to retain personal boundaries and agency before asking for new attachments or roles.

Meanwhile, the girlfriend’s boyfriend may genuinely want fairness when it comes to shared children and household routines. But stepparents (or romantic partners of parents) who step too far into parental roles without mutual agreement often trigger resistance, regardless of their good intentions.

Given all that, the son’s response seems understandable and reasonable. He isn’t denying care to anyone; he’s asserting that his healing process, grief, adult identity, and sense of home deserve respect. There’s space for compassion and acceptance, but only if boundaries and open communication are honored.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

This group emphasizes that the boyfriend has no place acting as a father figure, especially given the OP’s grief

CheekaBoomBoom − NTA : You’re an adult so the rules shouldn’t be the same for you as they are for his teenage children.

Your father recently died and neither him or your mom should be trying to push the step dad role onto you.

I completely understand why you’d lose it like that. It still too soon for him to be trying to take your fathers position.

He probably means no harm but he has to understand given the circumstances and why you’d feel the way you do.

realdepressodepresso − NTA. Did he even discuss about your grievance and your relationship with you?

What has your mom said about this? You were completely in the right. Dude pushed you to your limits and you’re still grieving.

exist10tial_crisis − NTA. First, he's not your dad. Second, you are a grown man.

Third, you're grieving and nobody should be trying to appoint themselves to the place your father held in your life.

Fourth, this guy is not "family" and neither are his daughters your "siblings. "

He's your mom's live-in boyfriend who brought his kids along; there is no official relationship.

He's not even your stepdad yet, and if in the future he marries your mom, he's still not either of the people who raised you.

Fifth. .. I'm very sorry for your loss. It's a terrible thing to lose someone so suddenly.

I hope you had wonderful times together, and that those memories can carry you through this awkward and difficult situation.

I hope your mom is the kind of lady you can tell these things to,

and that she'll be able to see it from your perspective and tell this guy to stop trying to parent her adult son.

Jax_Cat11 − Nta. He needs to learn his place, you’re an adult and yeah he is trying to take your dads spot.

By trying to be your parent even though you don’t know him that well, have no bond with him,

no respect for him past basic human respect and he hasn’t been around he’s trying to step into your dads place.

You’re an only child, you were raised as an only child. He needs to stay in his lane, your stuff is between you and your mom only.

And your extended family can go pound tar they aren’t in the situation you are.

He needs to get it into his head that he’s only dating your mom, they aren’t married

and even then at any point she can walk away so he really needs to drop it.

Truth be told you might never see him as a father figure and that’s ok. They have to live with that.

You need to sit down with your mother though and set your boundaries.

Make it clear that while you’re happy for her this isn’t going to happen.

And you don’t have to accept them as family either or listen to anything he says.

Your belongings are yours and yours alone so when it comes to that he does have to back off and if your mother doesn’t like it to bad on that.

These commenters believe the OP’s mother should take control of the situation and enforce boundaries

classicgeri − NTA If anything at all, he should be following your mothers example in regards to a strictness/closeness boundary towards you.

He’s overstepping this boundary, due to the short nature of his relationship with your mother

(Despite living under their roof, if your mother isn’t enforcing these rules, then neither should he.

You’ve explained yourself politely and put your foot down, however he chooses to deal with that shouldn’t be your problem.

Sucks that your family doesn’t see that, especially so soon after your loss. One year barely feels like any time has passed.

brotogeris1 − NTA. At all. Not even a little bit. He's completely out of line, and you set him straight in a direct, adult way.

I don't understand the "family" bit, he's your mom's boyfriend. They could break up tomorrow.

His kids aren't your siblings. You aren't required to share anything with them. This guy sounds bizarre. Continue doing your thing.

Your mother should have your back a little bit more. She introduced this weird, disruptive guy into your lives while you're grieving.

She's probably not thinking clearly. Grieving a loved one is awful. Condolences on your dad. Good luck with everything.

GrizzlyGrrl − NTA. As both a stepkid and a stepparent, I can tell you that the problem isn't the boyfriend, it's your mom.

It's her house and her son, and whatever this guy is doing, it's because your mom is allowing it.

Take you and your mom for a session with a grief counselor.

You'd be amazed at how much your mom is allowing because of grief,

and she also needs to realize everyone's grief is different and at a different pace.

This dude is WAY out of line, and I would listen to the poster who said it was an early red flag for future super controlling behavior.

[Reddit User] − NTA First, I'm sorry for your loss. Second, this guy is ridiculous.

You're a grown-a** adult and already were a grown-a** adult when you lost your father.

The job of raising you was already done before you and this guy first met, which, by the way could have happened in any other setting.

For instance, you could have met him as a new coworker, in which case he wouldn't have even thought to see you

as anything different than another adult. Just keep standing your ground and hopefully he'll also see how ridiculous this is.

Or if not, he's still not entitled to any kind of relationship with you.

olbaze − NTA. Living for free at your parent's home should come with some duties that you do, particularly if you're not doing anything else.

In my family, we started out with taking out the trash and emptying the dish washer in exchange for allowance.

We kept doing that, even after the allowance stopped being a thing.

A step parent trying to take the role of an actual parent is a bad thing when you're dealing with a child that has any kind of autonomy,

like a 10-year-old or something. Same situation with a grow-up person?

The role the step-parent will have is "significant other of parent", because the parenting job is already over.

Being sent to your room? Loss of "privileges"?

Curfews? This man is treating you like a teenager who just got their driver's license a month ago.

You need to put a stop to that as soon as possible.

But keep in mind that this person also does not have experience raising adult children: Their kids are still teenagers.

They don't have a point of reference for what is an appropriate interaction with an adult offspring living with them. So you need to set those boundaries.

Blue_eyed_beast − Definitely NTA Maybe talk to your mother?

Tell that she should talk to him and tell him that it's not his place to act as a father.

I mean he can't even argue that it is his roof you're living under. Also you should try to talk to him without making it a fight.

Tell him things like that you have the feeling he's trying to replace your father and that that isn't right for you.

Also tell him that you are an adult and have the responsibilities of one

and that it feel disrespectful to be treated like a child. But remember to stay calm no matter how much the situation angers you.

This group supports OP standing their ground, stressing that they are an adult, not a teenager

AngryFishCake − NTA: you're an adult, WTF is up with losing car privileges and curfews?! That's insane!

mulledfox − NTA. You’re not 15, you’re not 17, you’re not 18 and a college freshman, you’re 23.

At your age, some people already have three kids!

Do you think the OP handled this the right way? How would you have approached a similar situation? Share your thoughts below!

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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