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In-Laws Keep Calling Her “Mama,” She Finally Snaps And Demands Her Name Back

by Layla Bui
January 15, 2026
in Social Issues

Becoming a parent changes a lot of things, but for some people, it feels like it erases parts of who they were before. Hobbies fade into the background, conversations shift, and suddenly your entire identity seems to revolve around one role.

That’s the frustration at the heart of this woman’s post after a holiday visit with her in-laws pushed her past her breaking point. What started as small comments and nicknames built up over time, until one weekend made it impossible for her to stay quiet any longer. When she finally spoke up, the reaction wasn’t what she expected.

Now she’s caught between standing up for herself and being told she ruined the mood for everyone else. Scroll down to see what she said, how her family reacted, and why she’s questioning whether she went too far.

A mother snaps after her in-laws repeatedly call her “mama,” leaving her identity unseen

In-Laws Keep Calling Her “Mama,” She Finally Snaps And Demands Her Name Back
not the actual photo

'AITA for losing it and telling in-laws to stop calling me “mama” and trying to erase my identity?'

I have 2 kids, 2f, 4f. I f__king hate how everyone thinks of me as being just a mommy now.

I don’t get to be my own person. I’m just mommy.

Husband doesn’t face this. He gets gifts from everyone that have to do with his hobbies.

Me? I get a bunch of mommy s__t. Tee hee, mommy needs wine!

And like matching outfits. I don’t mean like, one of those cutesy matching pajama sets that the nurses

and horse girls wear in their staged Christmas insta pics.

I mean like, people actually think I’m going to go out in public wearing some cutesy matching outfits with my toddlers.

As though I think they’re mini versions of myself? Or dolls?

From the time we got to the in-laws, it was “mama” this and “mama” that.

At some point, my SIL said it and I said “You know my name is (Carmen), right?” she just looked at me funny and said “Of course, silly?”

I said “So why do you keep calling me “mama”? You aren’t going around calling (husband) papa?”

SIL just looked at me like I had 2 heads and was like “Um, okay.”

This went on all over Christmas. Here you go, mama. Want another slice, mama?

At that point I was just like “Do you guys mind calling me by my name instead of calling me mama?”

The same SIL as before did the whole golly-gee doe eyed thing and said “But you’re such a good mama!”

I said that I’m not JUST a mom. I gestured to the things that husband got for Christmas from them,

and said “Why didn’t you guys get him anything that says “papa”?

Everything you gave me is somehow related to me being a mom. Why does HE get to be his own person?”

MIL grabbed my hand and squeezed it and said that she was sorry that she made me feel like this.

She was just “so excited” about being a grandma and she never really thought of things like that.

I was feeling a little better until SIL2 and SIL3 started going after me.

One of them did that whole “Are you okay? Do you need to talk to someone?

You sound so angry, it isn’t healthy” faux concern thing that’s meant to shame you for having any emotional response.

The other one was angry and saying that “is being a mom somehow beneath you”

and “do you think you’re better than the rest of us?” and all that.

When we finally left, he asked me why I’d kept it in for so long, and I said that I haven’t.

No one listened to me before. I’ve said these things plenty of times.

I’ve always asked them to call me by my name and not some disgusting nickname that boils me down to giving birth.

He nodded, but said that I’d put a big pallor on the weekend and that I need to apologize for the outburst at some point.

I said sure, as soon as SILs apologize to me for dehumanizing me for years. We’re at a stalemate. AITA?

We all want to be seen as whole people, not reduced to the roles we play. When others interact with us, they bring assumptions about who we are, but being known only for one part of ourselves can feel suffocating. For many parents, especially mothers, this tension between identity and role is deeply felt and emotionally charged.

In this story, the OP isn’t upset about being a mom per se, she adores her children, but she feels pigeonholed into that identity alone. She hears “mama” from her in-laws so persistently that it seems to erase Carmen as a person.

She wants acknowledgment that she exists beyond motherhood. Her hurt is compounded by the fact that her husband doesn’t face the same reduction of identity, even though both partners share parenthood in their family culture.

The repeated use of a nickname tied only to her parental role feels like an everyday reminder that her personal identity has been overshadowed by her child-rearing role.

Psychologically, this feeling can connect to what sociologists call role engulfment. Role engulfment occurs when a single social role becomes so dominant that it overshadows other aspects of a person’s identity.

This can narrow how others perceive them and how they perceive themselves, making it harder to express interests, traits, and parts of themselves unrelated to that role.

Research on motherhood and identity supports this lived experience. Studies find that motherhood often leads to identity shifts, some positive, like increased empathy or maturity, but also pressures linked to societal expectations about being the “good mom.” These expectations can shape relationships and how mothers see themselves beyond caregiving tasks.

In other words, being called “mama” all the time isn’t neutral; it reflects cultural meanings about motherhood that can overshadow individual identity and autonomy.

There’s also a relevant observation from the early childhood field: when adults assume a parent’s role name for convenience, it can unintentionally feel dismissive of the individual’s own identity.

Many professionals recommend asking caretakers how they prefer to be addressed to show respect and acknowledgment of their personhood.

This helps explain why OP’s reaction went beyond frustration with a nickname. It was about emotional erasure and feeling unheard for years. The in-laws’ dismissive responses and attempts to frame her feelings as “anger” or “unhealthy” only intensified her sense of not being validated.

At its core, this conflict isn’t about rejecting motherhood; it’s about being respected as a complex individual with interests, preferences, and a name that isn’t limited to one social function.

Healthy family relationships require listening, respect, and genuine recognition of personal identity. OP’s request to be called by her name is not unreasonable, it’s a boundary that preserves her sense of self beyond motherhood.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

These commenters insisted no apology is owed and praised standing firm

Patpoose187 − No. Your SILs owe you an apology and you owe them….. F__king nothing. Even after.

ClutchGamingGuy − "Outburst" lol why do so many people think having an opinion or emotional response is an "outburst".

If they don't want to respect who you are or what you ask, then they can f__k off. NTA. No apology necessary.

Rochsmell − NTA and your husband and in laws are the As.

Their behavior is just b. s-good on you for speaking out and sticking to your point-

I doubt it’ll come, but I do hope you get an apology in the future.

Don’t apologize and if needed, maybe it’s time to get petty-everyone gets gifts about their family status-

dad, grandma and aunty themed gifts for all!

These commenters argued confrontation was justified after boundaries were ignored

claireclairey − NTA. Once again, this is a case of family members needing to be confronted about their behavior,

because politely asking them to stop DIDN'T WORK. And then it's all "WhY DiDn'T YoU SaY SoMeThInG???"

Your answer to your husband is exactly correct: if you "need" to apologize for your "outburst,"

then they need to apologize for their failure to listen to you until you reached your breaking point, and had an outburst.

[Reddit User] − NTA, calling out sexism and requesting people call you by your name are perfectly reasonable things to do.

Your husband and SILs are TAs for not listening to you or respecting your request.

If you had already mentioned this to your MIL previously she is also in the wrong,

but if not she handled it well by apologizing and not intentionally doing it.

These commenters felt MIL responded well, while SILs rejected fair feedback

MutatisMutandisEtc − NTA. Your MIL reacted appropriately imo saying she didn’t realize and had no ill intent (which I believe).

Your point is well made and your SILs just seem like people who can’t take feedback.

Many of my female friends who had children have expressed the same frustration as you, you’re right to speak up.

discodethcake − NTA. I've gone through something similar to what you have, and reading what your SILs said made my blood boil.

You don't owe them ANYTHING. No apology. Nothing.

I think your MIL maybe had a genuine response and intentions, she at least seemed empathetic.

I once tried to be involved with a group of mother's at my oldest child's first school and they acted similar to your SILs.

The whole "mom needs wine" thing was so annoying.

When they found out I didn't drink - you would have thought the world stopped turning.

Then it turned into me thinking I was better than them because I didn't need wine as a "coping skill".

After this and their constant disapproval & passive aggressive comments of my style choice & hair

(the first time I was there the "main" mother said "Oh are you someone's aunt?"

Meanwhile I know she knew who I was) plus some other ridiculous comments—I finally lost my cool

and said "NO, I don't think I'm better than anyone but I'm in recovery and have had 12+ years sober so I CAN'T drink wine."

That didn't go over well, I suddenly became "unhinged" and their fake worry was so apparent.

"Have you seen your therapist lately I think you may need to talk to someone", etc. Same dehumanizing s__t.

Some people are just stuck in their own little bubble. Some people just suck.

You don't owe them an apology at all, if they ever apologize to you - just say thank you and nothing more.

These commenters called out sexism and loss of personal identity

Sunny_Hill_1 − NTA. It is indeed infuriating when a woman's whole identity is simplified to "oh, she is a mother" now,

and it's quite telling that it doesn't happen to men. Your husband's family is just being plain misogynistic.

Majestic_Grocery7015 − NTA I hate that so much. I was getting angry just reading this.

It f__king disgusts me to be called mommy or mama by anyone other than my child

(I will forgive it if its directed to the child) it disgusted and annoyed me while I was pregnant and it infuriates me now.

I'm a grown a** adult who just happens to have offspring.

I have a name and an identity beyond my former parasite. Sorry for ranting. Don't apologize

SmutnySmalec − NTA, maybe it's cultural difference, but I can't comprehend how can anyone call somebody else than their own mother "mama".

For me it's something you'd maybe call an animal with it's babies. It just seems so diminishing and disgusting.

These commenters stressed respect for individuality beyond motherhood

AeroOwl19 − NTA - you are a human being and they are ignoring your request to be your own individual.

They clearly don't respect you as you deserve and your husband needs to support you more

and resolve this problem properly so that they all treat you like a human and not a servant to your own child.

If they don't change their ways and you feel like being petty,

I would suggest calling them by SIL1, SIL2 and SIL3 and grandmama rather than their actual names.

just-jen57 − NTA. Your in laws sound super annoying. Some women base their whole personality around ‘mommy culture’

and forget that they were a whole ass person before having kids. Good for you for standing up for yourself.

These commenters joked about petty gift-based retaliation

holisarcasm − NTA. Every single present your husband gets from now on says daddy on it. The worse looking the better.

Ugly socks, ugly shirts, ugly sweats. Never another present that has anything to do with his interests.

flmdicaljcket − I think aprons that say “auntie needs Botox” would be perfect…

general_grievances_7 − Girl. I got my husband so much cool s__t for Christmas. Do you know what I got?

A diaper bag. My kid isn’t even born yet and I feel your misery. NTA. This s__t sucks.

What looks like a holiday blow-up is really a story about boundaries, gender roles, and how easily women’s identities get erased after motherhood. She didn’t reject being a mom, she rejected being only that.

Do you think she should apologize to keep the peace, or was this the inevitable result of years of being ignored? How would you handle family members who refuse to see you as more than a role? Share your thoughts below.

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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