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Teen Hates Stepdad, Mom Says Enough Is Enough; Now Family Drama Hits The Pumpkin Patch

by Layla Bui
December 21, 2025
in Social Issues

Blending families isn’t easy, especially when children are grieving a parent who has passed away. Traditions that were once comforting can quickly become flashpoints, particularly if one child feels strongly about the past.

A mother of two daughters faced this challenge when she included her stepdad in a cherished father-daughter outing with her younger child. The older daughter’s resentment clashed with her sister’s excitement, leading to heated arguments.

The mother tried to balance fairness, grief, and her younger child’s happiness, but tensions boiled over. Keep reading to see how this family navigated a deeply emotional and complicated situation.

A mother struggles to manage her teenage daughter’s anger after her stepdad continues a family tradition with her younger sister

Teen Hates Stepdad, Mom Says Enough Is Enough; Now Family Drama Hits The Pumpkin Patch
not the actual photo

AITA for telling my daughter “Yeah, I get it, you hate him, when he went on a father daughter trip?

So, I (42F) have two daughters: Emma (17F) and Lucy (10F).

The issue revolves around my husband, who is Emma’s stepfather.

Emma’s dad passed away when she was younger, and I remarried three years ago.

She and my husband don’t get along at all, and she makes it clear she dislikes him.

My husband has tried to bond with her, but Emma shuts him out completely, refuses to talk, and ignores him.

We all know she will never see him as a father figure and we are fine with it

Here’s where it gets tricky: when Emma was younger her bio dad would take her to father-daughter outings.

We have a lot of pictures of those, Lucy was too young to remember any of them.

We thought it would be nice to do again, since Lucy does see her stepdad as her dad.

Specifically they would go to a pumpkin patch and then carve them

They went to the pumpkin patch yesterday and had a great time.

Lucy and my husband really bonded and had a good time.

The issue is Emma, she is pissed that he took over the tradition with Lucy.

That my husband stole the tradition and I am disrespecting my late husband's memory.

I was exhausted from hearing the same arguments over and over.

So, I snapped and said, “Yeah, I get it, you hate him, but your sister sees him as her dad and doesn’t have these memories like you do."

Are you really going to ruin this for your sister and no one is going to a pumpkin patch

She has been pissed and calling me an insensitive jerk.

She is also getting on Lucy’s ass for going with my husband. My mom thinks I am a jerk here and I need an outside opinion

Edit: beofre I get a million put her into therapy comments, we tried twice.

She would just sit there. For months even with different therapist, she would not talk, she just sat there

Loving someone doesn’t erase the ache of loss, and forming new bonds can bring both joy and guilt. Many readers will recognize the tension between holding on to cherished memories and opening one’s heart to new experiences.

In this story, a mother strives to honor both her daughters’ emotional worlds, one shaped by memory and grief, the other by present connection, while trying to create a sense of family that doesn’t invalidate either daughter’s experience.

At the core of this conflict are powerful emotional dynamics that go beyond the surface conflict about a pumpkin patch. Emma’s resistance isn’t merely teenage defiance; it’s an expression of loyalty to her late biological father and fear of replacing sacred shared moments.

Meanwhile, Lucy’s enjoyment with her stepfather reflects a different emotional reality: she can form a positive attachment where Emma cannot.

Research on blended families shows that children often feel torn between their biological parent and a stepparent, experiencing what experts call loyalty conflicts, a fear that bonding with a new parent figure somehow betrays the original one.

From a fresh perspective, it’s worth noting how grief manifests differently at different ages. Teens like Emma lived through the experiences now immortalized in photos and memory, so traditions tied to a lost parent can feel sacred and non-replicable.

Younger children without those memories may see the same tradition as a chance to build joyful connections rather than relive a past loss. This distinction isn’t about who “feels more,” but about how attachment and identity are shaped by developmental stages and emotional history.

Clinical insights illuminate this complexity. According to Psychology Today, children in blended families may experience conflicting emotions toward stepparents: while they may want their biological parent to be happy, they often feel intense loyalty to the parent they lost and guilt over “replacing” them.

These loyalty binds are normal and can lead to resistance toward a stepparent’s involvement, even when the stepparent’s intentions are loving.

This expert view helps explain the mother’s choice: encouraging Lucy to participate in the tradition wasn’t about minimizing Emma’s feelings; it was about acknowledging that both daughters’ emotional needs matter.

By recognizing that Lucy’s attachment to her stepfather doesn’t erase Emma’s grief, she upheld fairness while nurturing a healthy family environment.

In situations like this, families often benefit from creating parallel rituals that honor the memory of the lost parent while allowing space for new ones to grow, a step toward emotional balance rather than exclusion.

Instead of seeing Emma’s anger as “spoiling,” it may help to view it as part of her grief process and to encourage open discussion about what these traditions truly represent for each child.

Here are the comments of Reddit users:

These users support the parent, saying the daughter’s behavior is unfair and she’s misdirecting anger

PumpkinPowerful3292 − NTA - He didn't steal anything.

Does Emma now believe that for forever now anyone who goes on a father-daughter excursion can't?

How narcissistic and self-centered. That is just plain silly.

The only person here who is being disrespectful is Emma towards Lucy,

trying to deny her the love and support from your husband. And that should not put up with in no uncertain terms.

Tell your to b__t out.

NegativePlants_ − NTA. This is going to sound harsh, but she doesn't hate him, she resents YOU.

But you're her Mom and she doesn't want to be mad/resent you, so she takes it out on him,

because she's a teenager, and that's what they do. YOU moved on. YOU got married again.

YOU brought a new man into the house. YOU "forgot" her Dad.

She's mad at YOU. THATS what you need to be focusing on.

Prior_Lobster_5240 − NTA I tell my five and three-year-olds all the time "You are allowed to be upset.

You're allowed to be angry or sad or frustrated.

You are NOT allowed to use that as an excuse to be mean to other people or throw a tantrum."

Your daughter is still hurting, and that is understandable.

And you are doing whatever you can to help her. If she won't participate in therapy or make any effort to at least be civil,

then she's the problem here. You can't change people.

You can't make them feel how you want them to feel or do what you think they should do.

She is choosing to be miserable and you cannot fix that.

She has that right. She can be as miserable and angry as she feels she should be.

If she wants to hold onto that anger and hurt, she can do that. But she isn't allowed to take that out on other people.

These commenters argue the parent snapped at a grieving teen and should acknowledge her feelings more compassionately

RulerOfNyaNyaLand − You're the parent. YTA. Stop treating your daughter's feelings like they don't matter.

Address her feelings. Quit saying she feels hateful when the feeling she's having is mourning, loss, sorrow,

and pain while she intensely misses her dad.

Can't you just acknowledge her feelings instead of snapping at her?

"Oh, honey!" you say, as you give her a hug, "I know how much you miss your dad.

He loved you so much and you loved him too. I'm so sorry that this must bring back painful memories for you.

It's okay to feel sad. It's okay to miss him." You can just let her feel that. You can let her talk about it.

And no, it doesn't matter if it's for the thousandth time. Grief doesn't operate on your time limit.

If she gets snarky with her sister, you can take her aside and remind her gently that it isn't okay to take her grief out on anyone else.

If she needs to talk or vent, you're there for her.

Her sister and step dad aren't doing activities together to spite her. She has to find a way to acknowledge that.

But more understanding from you would go a long way with her. Snapping at her isn't helpful.

At all. Do better. Also, go apologize.

You have another romantic partner, her younger sister has a father figure, but your oldest daughter doesn't have a new dad.

And no, it isn't her fault for refusing to bond, she just didn't choose him and she didn't bond. You can't force it.

Hug your daughter. Ask her if she wants to talk about it and make yourself listen before you talk.

AdBig2355 − YTA. You have made it clear in your comments you don't think about your daughter or her feelings.

PeachManzie − You’re being purposely obtuse to suit yourself.

You know it would be weird and uncomfortable for Emma to watch the guy who has taken up much of your time,

at a pivotal time in her life, go on THE EXACT SAME outing her dead dad used to take her on.

You shouldn’t have said that to her. You’re being pretty awful.

She’s a hurting teenager; get over yourself.

wingeddogs − Do you care about your daughter or being right?

Because if you care about your daughter, you could have a heart-to-heart instead of dismissing her feelings as hate.

One of your daughters has a father, the other had to cope with the fact that her dad passed away.

Do you have empathy for that, or are you confused as to why she’s not happy with the replacement dad?

This group highlights the difficulty of blended family dynamics and validates both daughters’ emotions

Party-Possession-310 − NAH Puh all these patchwork family stories are always hard to assess.

Overall, it sounds like you are validating her feelings, and not forcing her to see your new husband as her dad,

which is great while at the same time trying to be a family for Lucy which is also great.

Frankly, I am not sure if internet strangers are the right crowd to get a perspective here

So, I snapped and said Don't think you are T A,

but you should probably still go and apologize and seek a conversation with Emma.

Understandably, she has had a difficult time dealing with the loss of her father and I am wondering

if all of you have gotten the professional counseling that you needed to process such a life-changing event.

Agreeable-Mix-7655 − I think there's NAH, I understand why she's upset, she misses her dad a lot clearly.

But seeing that you waited 5 years to marry,

don't force her to treat your husband like a father, etc makes a difference in my judgment.

Your younger daughter loves him and deserves those memories too.

Your older daughter could've gone and they could've talked about bio dad to add him to the festivities,

then your husband wouldn't have been taking over tradition. I really hope the best for all of you truly.

Family traditions can spark tension when grief and new dynamics collide. While Lucy bonded with her stepdad, Emma wrestled with memories of her late dad.

Did telling her “you hate him” cross a line, or was it a boundary for her sister’s happiness? How would you handle this delicate stepfamily drama?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

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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