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Woman Bans Religion From Her Home To Protect Her Girlfriend’s Trauma, Mother Loses It

by Katy Nguyen
February 2, 2026
in Social Issues

Living with trauma from religious backgrounds can leave scars that are difficult to heal, but for one couple, their new home was meant to be a sanctuary from that past.

They made the decision to create a no-religion space, free from any religious symbols, discussions, or practices.

The problem arose when the mother of one partner, a devout Catholic, was asked to comply with these rules.

Her refusal to remove her cross necklace led to a tense standoff.

Woman Bans Religion From Her Home To Protect Her Girlfriend’s Trauma, Mother Loses It
Not the actual photo

'AITA for making our home into a no-religion space, and including my mother in the rules?'

My (27F) girlfriend (32F) finally moved in together after dating for three years, due to money troubles keeping us in seperate roomate situations.

We're very excited to make our apartment into our own space, since for both of us this is the first home we've had without sharing with anyone else.

My mother (and my late father) is rabidly catholic.

I was raised catholic growing up, church every Sunday, praying before every meal and snack, blah blah blah.

I refused to do the confirmation, which enraged my mother, but she backed off after the priest told her that it was my right.

She "didn't approve" of me being bi (which is weird, she surprisingly is ok with gay people) and still dragged me to church, hoping I'd grow out of it.

Long story short, I moved out at 18, and have kept a respectfully distant relationship with her.

She's mellowed a bit with age, but she still tries to invite me to church every week, even after I told her plainly to cut that out.

She's respectful to my girlfriend, mostly because I will choose her over my mother if it comes to that, and it nearly did

when she accused my girlfriend of being a predator when we met due to our age gap.

My girlfriend has an even more traumatic past with religion.

When she was outed at 12, her parents abused her until she was 18, then disowned her.

The entire time using bible quotes and "gods mission" as an excuse.

She still believes in A god, just not in religion or worship, which I respect.

With all our trauma about religion, we decided to make the place a no-religion space.

That means no praying, no religious symbols of any kind, no proselytizing, no talking about religious settings.

My mother hates that, because all her friends are churchgoers and 80% of her stories relate to something happening in church.

She also gets mad that we make her take off or cover her cross necklace, as is the rule.

She claims we're being hypocritical, to which I told her she's lucky to be in my life at all.

Still, some of our friends told us we're taking it too far, and "using our trauma as an outlet for revenge."

The argument sounds like it’s about a necklace and a few “church stories,” but it’s really a collision between lived trauma and a parent’s lifelong habit of making faith the center of every room.

In the OP’s case, she and her girlfriend finally have a home that belongs to them, and they are trying to protect it from an influence that has historically brought conflict, shame, and fear.

The OP grew up in a rigid Catholic environment, where weekly church and constant prayer were treated as defaults, not choices.

Her mother has “mellowed,” yet still pushes invitations and religious talk that the OP has already declined.

Meanwhile, the girlfriend’s history is heavier: she was outed as a child and then abused and disowned under religious justification.

Put together, their “no-religion space” rule reads less like a quirky lifestyle preference and more like a safety policy written by experience.

The opposing view is not hard to predict. To the mother, religion is identity, community, and social language. If 80% of her stories happen at church, banning church talk can feel like banning her personality.

Being asked to cover a cross necklace likely feels humiliating, like being told she’s acceptable only if she edits herself at the door.

Friends calling the rule “revenge” are reacting to that optics problem: the boundary looks so strict that it can resemble punishment, even if the intention is protection.

Motivations matter here. The couple’s rule seems driven by nervous-system realism: certain words, symbols, and rituals can cue memories and body responses that do not politely wait outside the living room.

That pattern is consistent with how clinician-writers describe religious trauma.

Psychologist Marlene Winell defines Religious Trauma Syndrome as “the condition experienced by people who are struggling with leaving an authoritarian, dogmatic religion and coping with the damage of indoctrination.”

In that framing, the “no symbols, no praying” rule isn’t petty. It’s an attempt to control triggers in the one place they’re supposed to feel safe.

This story also plugs into a bigger social issue: family rejection and religious rejection can be psychologically expensive, especially for LGBTQ people.

A 2025 open-access study reports that 46.1% of participants had experienced religious rejection because of gender identity at some point, and the paper links religious rejection with increased depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation.

Even when parents keep a relationship on the surface, ongoing pressure and “faith-first” framing can still function like rejection when it dismisses identity or boundaries.

On the flip side, research in Annals of LGBTQ Public and Population Health found that family acceptance is strongly protective for LGBTQ youth, and that protective association holds across religious groups.

The takeaway is blunt: acceptance helps, and religious conflict can harm, so the couple’s instinct to defend their home environment is not irrational.

Advice is to tighten the boundary’s purpose while softening its delivery: the couple can keep a rule against proselytizing, prayers directed at them, and religious debates in the home, while considering a more practical compromise on passive items like a small necklace if it’s not used as a conversation starter.

They can also define visit terms in advance (duration, topics to avoid, and what happens if the boundary is crossed) and frame it as “house rules that protect mental health,” not “rules that erase her.”

Guidance on adult family boundaries often emphasizes that limits work best when they are clear, consistent, and not delivered as character judgments.

At the center of the conflict is a simple message the OP has been trying to live, not just say: this new apartment is the first place where she and her girlfriend get to decide what feels safe, and religion has not felt safe for either of them.

When the mother insists that faith must follow her into every space, she isn’t only sharing beliefs, she’s reopening old wounds.

The couple isn’t obligated to host that dynamic in their own home, yet if they want a relationship with her, they may need boundaries that protect peace without turning every visit into a symbolic exile.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These users were supportive of the OP’s decision to set clear rules about religious discussions in their home, but disagreed with the demand to remove religious jewelry, like the cross necklace.

amish__ − NTA... Your house, your rules! But I personally think telling her to cover up her cross necklace is probably one step too far.

saturday_sun3 − NTA for the rest, as no religious artefacts and no religious talk, your house, your rules.

But YTA for policing what your mother wears even in your own home to such an extent.

A single necklace is very subtle, and it isn't your role to dictate that jewellery be removed.

You can ask politely (which itself would be AH-ish, but at least respectful), but you have no right to demand.

OkraOk1769 − Understandable, but I’d be careful about the clothing g/symbols/jewelry ban and who you could

potentially alienate in the future, as far as friends. Many religions require accoutrements.

Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, various Christian sects all (can) require specific clothing or accessories to be worn.

These commenters strongly disagreed with the OP, labeling their actions as petty and controlling.

duke113 − YTA. You're being an absolute petty jerk.

There's a big difference between asking for your mom not to talk about church in your house and making her literally remove her cross.

Gidget_87 − I understand the background behind it, but slight YTA for taking it too far.

Not wanting religion in your life is absolutely your right, but to go as far as to not allow her to wear jewelry that is

important to her personal beliefs and restricting her from sharing what is happening in her life seems to be taking it too far.

Some of the restrictions are completely reasonable, like telling her not to invite you to church anymore or not wanting proselytizing or praying in your home.

I think you should rein it back slightly by setting the example of mutual respect by allowing her to wear her own

religious jewelry and share parts of her life as long as it doesn’t cross the line of proselytizing.

These users highlighted the deeper issue of unresolved trauma between the OP and their mother.

craftycat1135 − If you were truly a no-religion space, it would apply to your Muslim friends and their hijabs.

I imagine you would allow them to pray. Not just Christians.

The way you apply the rule you are a no Christian space and you are being a h__ocrite looking for revenge.

If this is about your mom, then cut her out or take your issues to therapy.

jeswalsurprise − YTA. So I am guessing that no Muslims can come into your home wearing a hijab.

No Sikhs can come into your house either. Or Jews wearing a kippah. Will you make them shave to enter your home as well?

Basically, you are bigots using your issues to force others. Basically, you are doing to others what was done to you. Congratulations.

You are shoving your views down the throat of any guest in your house.

Jessicamorrell − You both need to get therapy for your past.

Your house, your rules, but YTA for taking it too far and using your trauma as revenge.

Not all religious people are bad. There are good and bad people in all walks of life.

You don't have to have it in your own, but you can't dictate what other people do with their lives and what they wear.

That is taking it too far, and that calls for therapy.

Some users were more empathetic toward the OP’s need for a secular space, agreeing that banning religious discussions and symbols from the home could be necessary for the OP’s comfort.

CatsEatGrass − NTA for banning religion in your home. I mean, you’re adults and have had enough.

You might give a pass for jewelry or storytelling of things that happened with church folks, though, as long as they aren’t preachy or evangelistic.

But you do you. I don’t think you’re being hypocritical at all.

No_Car_2053 − You both need to go to therapy to deal with this trauma.

[Reddit User] − YTA. I was with you until you asked her to remove or cover her necklace.

That impedes the freedom of religion. Feels the same as forcing someone not to wear jeans because you don't agree with it.

These users took a more emotional stance, suggesting that the OP was being just as unaccepting as their mother by limiting her expression of faith.

HappySummerBreeze − You’re being just as hateful and unaccepting as she is. Her faith is her identity. YTA.

Surprise_1 − ESH, but you are a little less. Rhe reaso why you're the a__hole is policing your guests' jewerly.

I'm a bi woman myself, and my cross necklace is a part of my identity as a believer in a God full of love, not one

tied to any specific religion (even if the cross is significant in certain ones like catholicism).

If any of my friends ever asked me that, honestly, I would be offended because

1. Why would you think my belief in God is a direct attack on someone I love?

2. Why do you make my religion a "you problem"? Whether I talk or believe in upstairs daddy or not doesn't have any effect on those who surround me.

And 3. I know it's your house, but being asked to leave a big piece of who I am by your doorstep before coming in sounds

more like just what all those biphobics AHs did to you (and to me). That's the only reason you're the a__hole too,

because you can't just prohibit the use of something that could be so very special for the person you claim to care about.

My cross was the one always between my palms while both my parents were in the hospital with cancer.

It held my hand more than some friends, even. So it would hurt so much if you were a friend and knew why

it means so much to me and how I don't use it to throw hate but to remind myself of love, you asked me to take it off.

Just like we can't "take off" our sexuality, we can't take off the symbols that truly represent a part of us without being disloyal to our values as decent people.

A couple of users suggested that while the OP’s rules about religious discussions in their home are valid, their approach was passive-aggressive.

ccl-now − I was absolutely with you until you basically said that when your mum is there, she can't talk about what

she's been up to or her friends because they are associated with the church.

Really? Even if she's not pushing it on you, she can't even mention anything or anyone to do with church?

And you make her cover up her cross, because just seeing it temporarily residing in your home, attached to

someone who will take it with her when she leaves, violates your rules?

This has gone further than just protecting your autonomy.

NTA for wanting to have a secular home environment, but YTA for using it as a passive-aggressive weapon against your mum.

She might well deserve your antipathy, but if you dislike her to that extent, you shouldn't pretend she's welcome when she's not.

[Reddit User] − You're taking things a bit too far here and acting very much like a militant anti-theist.

Ultimately, it is your decision, but you won't heal any of your pain by treating your mother like garbage or treating religious symbols like the plague.

It won't k__l you if your mother wears a cross anymore than it killed me to talk to Satanists who wore a pentagram.

Creating boundaries in a shared space is essential, especially when both partners have experienced trauma. But the question remains: Is it fair to impose these rules on family, even when their presence brings discomfort?

The Redditor’s decision to limit religious influence in their home is driven by valid reasons, but should they have handled it differently with their mother, given their history?

What’s your take on the balance between setting personal boundaries and respecting family relationships? Share your thoughts below!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 1/1 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/1 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/1 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/1 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/1 votes | 0%

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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