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Pregnant Couple Sets Boundaries, Grandma Says Her Opinion Matters More

by Marry Anna
February 1, 2026
in Social Issues

Family dynamics can shift quickly when a baby is on the way. Long-standing habits, unresolved frustrations, and unmet expectations tend to surface when roles start changing.

For one couple expecting their first child, that shift came sooner than expected.

The husband’s mother became fixated on a specific aspect of their pregnancy and refused to let it go, despite repeated signals that her involvement wasn’t welcome.

What made things worse was how directly the pressure affected his wife, turning excitement into stress.

Pregnant Couple Sets Boundaries, Grandma Says Her Opinion Matters More
Not the actual photo

'AITA for telling my mom she has zero rights to name my wife and my child, and her opinion is not wanted or important here?'

My mom is being the MIL in law from hell to my wife right now, and I snapped at her recently over this

and have laid some boundaries down, but I am questioning my reaction to her.

So my wife, Kenzie (25f), and I (25m) have been married for just over a year, and we're expecting our first child this year.

This will be my parents' first grandchild, and this has caused some craziness from my mom.

She has aimed most of this at Kenzie, but I did step in when I learned how pushy my mom became.

This started right after our pregnancy announcement.

My mom went to Kenzie and told her we should name our child Rodger if we had a boy and Elizabeth if we had a girl.

Rodger was my mom's grandfather, and she wanted to name me or one of my brothers Rodger, but Dad vetoed the name every time.

Elizabeth is her favorite girl name, and my dad vetoed that for my sister, too.

Kenzie told her we weren't really looking for name suggestions, and we had discussed a few already.

My mom told her the names were important and should be used.

A couple of weeks after the first incident, my mom asked Kenzie if she knew whether baby Rodger or baby Elizabeth was joining the family.

Kenzie told her neither of those names was in the running, and we didn't know yet.

Kenzie mentioned mom bringing up the names to me then, but downplayed how pushy she was being, so I said nothing at that point.

We learned we were having a boy, and my mom became so pushy that she ordered blankets and clothes with the name Rodger embroidered on them.

The first time we knew of this was when she gave us a little door decoration with the name Rodger on it.

I told my mom then that we hadn't finalized a name yet and wouldn't be announcing it until after he's here anyway.

She went to Kenzie yet again and told her she was pissing her off by refusing to comply.

They argued about it, and Kenzie told me about it afterward.

I went to talk to my mom and make some things clear, and she asked why nobody in this family wanted to use the names she loved.

I told her that was something she should work through herself because we are not obligated to use them for her.

She then sent a gift package with all the clothes and a blanket with the name Rodger, and she sent them to my wife and posted them on social media.

This made people assume we had chosen the name Rodger. This is when I lost it and went over to confront her about the pushiness.

She told me it was important to take her opinion on board as my mom and our son's grandma.

And that's when I told her she had zero rights to name our baby, and her opinion wasn't wanted or important here.

My mom told me it was rude to dismiss her opinion and her feelings as unimportant, and I should have more respect for her.

It made me realize we need space from her right now, but I do wonder if I went too far. AITA?

 

Selecting a name for a child is one of the most personal decisions parents make, and it often carries emotional weight for extended family members.

Naming conflicts can trigger strong reactions because names are tied to identity, heritage, and family meaning, and suggestions from relatives, especially grandparents, can feel like heartfelt contributions rather than overreach.

However, child naming is fundamentally a parental right and responsibility; parents have the legal authority to name their child so long as they comply with basic legal restrictions (for example, avoiding obscenities or numerals), and no state typically grants grandparents decision-making power in this domain.

Parents have constitutional protections in naming their children, underscoring that this choice is theirs to make.

Despite this clear parental prerogative, family members often weigh in with opinions, some enthusiastic, others insistent, especially when they feel strongly attached to familial traditions or beloved names.

General public surveys reflect that grandparents frequently have opinions about baby names and often share them, whether or not those opinions are welcome; a sizable portion can be disappointed when their suggestions are not used, and many feel entitled to voice their preferences.

This well-intentioned, but sometimes intrusive, behavior can create stress for pregnant couples or new parents who are already navigating a cascade of decisions tied to identity, heritage, and family expectations.

Boundary setting in families, especially around grandparent involvement, is both necessary and common.

Parenting experts emphasize that establishing clear boundaries with grandparents and in-laws helps maintain healthy relationships while affirming parental roles and authority.

Communication about expectations, what kinds of suggestions are welcomed, how decisions will be made, and how family input will or will not be integrated, can prevent misunderstandings or hurt feelings leading up to a birth.

When grandparents overstep or persist despite being told no, psychological stress and relational tension can result.

Mental health and parenting professionals note that unsolicited advice or persistent pressure from grandparents, even if meant affectionately, can feel undermining and lead to resentment or conflict.

Setting and communicating boundaries respectfully but firmly is a strategy recommended for reducing stress while preserving the grandparent-parent relationship; clarity about parental roles paired with empathy for grandparents’ excitement can help all parties navigate emotional terrain without damaging long-term family bonds.

Negotiation around baby naming often underscores the importance of parents presenting a united front.

Resources on family dynamics suggest that couples discuss and agree on boundaries privately before explaining them to relatives, so extended family’s expectations are aligned with the parents’ values and decision-making authority.

Couples are encouraged to frame their choices around respect, love, and shared values, acknowledging grandparents’ excitement while making it clear that the final decision rests with the child’s parents.

In the scenario described, the OP’s response emerged from a place of protection for his wife and their autonomy as parents.

The repeated pressure from his mother, ordering embroidered clothing and sharing it on social media in a way that misrepresented the couple’s intentions, transformed what might have been benign suggestions into a pattern of intrusion.

Drawing boundaries by asserting that grandparents’ opinions are welcome but not determinative honors the parents’ central role.

Research shows that undermining parental decisions, especially in the early stages of family formation, can increase stress and negatively impact familial relationships if not addressed directly.

Guidance in such situations would advise combining firmness with compassion: affirm to grandparents that their love and excitement are appreciated, but clearly define which decisions belong exclusively to the child’s parents.

Maintaining open communication, emphasizing mutual respect, and minimizing public disputes about private choices can help preserve the broader family relationship while upholding the parents’ authority.

By reinforcing that naming is a deeply personal decision rooted in the parents’ values and hopes for their child, the family can transition from conflict to understanding, reducing long-term tension and focusing on shared joy in the new life they are preparing to welcome.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

This group agreed that OP’s response was a good start, but nowhere near strong enough.

 

SeApps63 − NTA. I don't think you went far enough. You need to make these boundaries really, really clear with your mom up front.

May I also suggest: 1) no more contacting Kenzie without also including you in the messages; you should be the only point of information between your parents at this stage.

2) Remind her that you are now mom and dad and make all the choices regarding your baby. There will be no 'comply with grandma' BS in your household.

3) Tell your mom you love her, and you're excited for her to be a grandma, but this is not going to fly.

4) Tell her moving forward, you are not accepting suggestions for names, parenting styles, gear, or anything else, and that you will ask if you need anything.

5) Ask for a public retraction on Facebook of the name.

Good luck. This will get worse if you don't get it together immediately.

disney_nerd_mom − NTA, you didn’t go far enough. You sit mom down and have a “come to Jesus” moment.

Tell her you and Kenzie are stepping back from her for the rest of the pregnancy because of her actions.

Your wife should not be subjected to this craziness. I’m betting she brings it up in everything you talk about on the phone or in person.

Tell mommy not so dearest that Rodger will not be your son’s name. You keep giving her hope by saying you haven’t decided.

Tell her no. Even if you loved it before, that name is tainted now.

Tell her she’s gone too far, and you’re stepping back to enjoy what’s left of the pregnancy. Then grey rock her. She doesn’t get any more info.

Have Kenzie block her and anyone else who gives her crap. Everything goes through you.

Then, for the cherry on top…you tell mom if she does not completely drop this name crap and any other shenanigans

like recruiting other family to harass you all, lil one will never meet her.

Please password-protect medical info and tell the hospital, doc, and labor nurses you are specifically banning her from labore room and visiting at all.

If she has the key to the house, get it back, and change the locks. ​ Then search the JUSTNOMIL forum for rules about visiting.

No hogging baby, no kissing, no staying in your home and then making the new mom do all the work, giving the

baby back when asked, no snatching the baby out of the parents’ arms, etc.

Also, Google “The Lemon Clot Essay”. Read it and believe it. Give you insight into how your wife is going to feel.

I’m betting your mom is going to be on your doorstep begging to have a baby.

Finally, if she harps on the name, tell her to have a baby herself, so then she can name it Rodger or Elizabeth.

She had her chance, and this baby is yours and your wife’s and yours to name, not here.

Cursd818 − NTA. Your mother is the one being rude. You need a time-out from her.

You've done the right thing by protecting your wife. Please don't back down.

Your mother is causing your wife untold stress with this, and stress is physically dangerous for your wife and the baby.

Your mother's feelings are so low on the list of priorities that they're basically meaningless.

Remind yourself of that whenever you start feeling weak.

You need to make a blanket statement to the family that Rodger is NOT the name and will not be a middle name either.

Until your mother apologises, she should not be around your wife or the baby at all. Being a grandparent is a privilege, not a right.

And she needs to earn it back by showing you both some respect.

If you don't nip this controlling, delusional behaviour in the bud, she's going to continue to act as though your wife is just an incubator for her do-over baby.

And that's unacceptable. She had her chance to use the names she loved, and it's sad that she couldn't.

If she's still mad about that, she needs to redirect that anger to where it belongs, which is her husband, rather than

destroying any possible future where she had a relationship with you, your wife, and your family.

MathematicianAny3777 − NTA, if anything, you didn't go far enough.

For her to still have the guts to tell you you were dismissing her feelings, it shows that you weren't hard enough.

I would go NC for a little time, like a time out from her. I would not allow her to call your wife or you, nor see the baby at...

She must realize how much she fucked up here. Once she goes through the fear of not seeing her grandbaby at all, she should calm down.

That's your mom, though, you're the one to decide how far you wanna go; check it with your wife too.

Maybe just tell her every time she tries to push her opinion about the baby on you or your wife (be it name, clothes, food,

education, whatever), she'll get a 2 months (or whatever time you seem fit) time out of your lives.

She's welcome to advise when asked for, not in any other case.

inFinEgan − NTA, and I don't think you went far enough.

I would have made a public post explaining that your mom invented the Rodger thing in her head and refuses to

listen to you when you say that you are NOT naming him Rodger and have always stated that Rodger would NOT be his name.

Honestly, people are going to start thinking that you promised this to your mom and changed your mind, breaking her heart.

I would be worried about her next post, and you shouldn't have to be doing that when expecting.

These commenters framed the situation as a classic case of a grandmother attempting a “do-over baby.”

[Reddit User] − Oh, honey, this is just the tip of the iceberg. Her entitlement to this baby because he’s your child (and you belong to her) is in full...

She sees herself as more important than his mommy. NTA. You didn’t go too far. You didn’t go far enough.

She has to learn that any boundary stomping or disrespect to your wife’s authority as this baby’s mom is going to have consequences.

And those consequences are going to be that she won’t have the grandmother experience you were hoping for.

Start by saying to her (don’t text her, call her) that you have asked your wife to block her number in her phone.

You will deal with any communication from now on because Mom can’t be respectful to your wife.

Make it clear that the only person you care about at the moment is your wife, and you will always put her first.

Dresden_Mouse − OP, this is only the beginning.

Your mom, for whatever reason, is going to try to insert herself and impose her will on the life of YOUR CHILD.

The words grandparents' rights will be thrown soon enough; she's dismissive of your wife and you.

Things will get worse if you don't stay firm; this could end your marriage. Go to r/JUSTNOMIL and look at your future. NTA.

theworldisonfire8377 − NTA, and you might be the first husband in Reddit history to actually have a backbone, so congratulations there LOL.

At least you realize now that she is overstepping, better now than never, I guess.

Your poor wife, though, MIL should not be bullying her, and you need to put your foot down and put up more boundaries,

because mommy dearest is only going to keep pushing until she gets what she wants.

Do not let her continue with her charade.

Let her know that her pushiness and insistence on the name are only going to end badly for her and that if she

wants a relationship with her grandson, she needs to get over the obsession with the name.

If she loves it so much, tell her to get a dog and name it Rodger.

Do not let her manipulate you into thinking that you are being hurtful and disrespectful, SHE is the one who cannot respect

your and your wife's wishes. If you need reassurance in your decision, take a little gander over to r/JUSTNOMIL

and give yourself a little pat on the back for not bending over to your mother's craziness.

SadFlatworm1436 − NTA and not too far …your dad s__t it down but she expects you to cave…just say no and

she can either be a grandma to your baby boy of your name chosing or not a grandma at all.

Your poor wife, she’ll be pushed around on everything needing to be done grandmas way. You need to keep pushing back hard to nip this.

This cluster applauded OP for finally drawing a line and urged him to keep going.

DogsReadingBooks − And that’s when I told her she had zero rights to name our baby, and her opinion wasn’t wanted or important here.

Good. This is your child. Not your mum’s child. She’s acting as if it’s her kid. Shut that s__t down now.

You did the right thing. I should have more respect for her F__k that. She doesn’t respect you or your wife.

Why the heck should you respect her? Edit: NTA.

Arkayenro − NTA. Try something like this: She will either back off or she will go nuclear.

Either way, you get your answer. Mom, you need to stop harassing my pregnant wife and causing stress to her and the baby.

It is not appreciated, and if you continue with this, you will be removed from our lives and the baby's life until you can act like an adult.

These users focused on safety and escalation.

Ok_Conversation9750 − NTA and it's your mom who's gone too far.

Tell her that Rodger is definitely off the table as far as names go, and she needs to let it go.

Any more of that behavior from her will result in you contacting her physician about your concerns for her

mental health, as she seems to be under the illusion that she's having a baby with you.

ColdstreamCapple − NTA. But from now on Kenzie should be telling you the moment your mom tries to a__ush her.

If she’s so insensitive to post a name she wants on social media then you need to make sure she’s NOWHERE

near you when Kenzie is in labour as I wouldn’t trust her not to pull anything at this point If it were me the way

she’s going she’d have to wait until your son turns 18 to meet him but you do you.

Plenty-Protection-72 − You are NTA, but you would be if you let this continue. Definitely need strong boundaries,

and low contact if necessary, especially since she's targeting your wife.

Make sure she knows this is completely unacceptable behaviour and you will 100% not name your child Rodger, no matter what she says.

It's important to be firm here, or she will continue like this.

This commenter brought empathy into the mix, encouraging OP to seek therapy for support in setting boundaries.

Personal_Regular_569 − Honey, this only gets worse from here. A good therapist can help you set healthy boundaries with your mother.

You haven't gone too far; you've barely made a dent. You need to do better to protect your wife and child from her nonsense.

I'd bet this isn't the first time she's bullied your wife. Ask your wife to be honest about the times your mom has pushed her limits.

Be kind to yourself. You deserve a soft life full of love and a family that contributes meaningfully to that.

You are worthy. A good therapist can help.

This wasn’t a heat-of-the-moment blowup over baby names. It was the breaking point after weeks of pressure, boundary-crossing, and public overreach aimed at a pregnant woman who had already said no.

Was his wording harsh, or was it the only language left that would cut through? When does “having an opinion” turn into entitlement? How would you handle a parent who refuses to hear no? 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%

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Hello, lovely readers! I’m Marry Anna, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. As a woman over 30, I bring my curiosity and a background in Creative Writing to every piece I create. My mission is to spark joy and thought through stories, whether I’m covering quirky food trends, diving into self-care routines, or unpacking the beauty of human connections. From articles on sustainable living to heartfelt takes on modern relationships, I love adding a warm, relatable voice to my work. Outside of writing, I’m probably hunting for vintage treasures, enjoying a glass of red wine, or hiking with my dog under the open sky.

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