Sometimes a single conversation can make you see a relationship in a very different light. For one woman, that moment came at what was supposed to be a warm family dinner celebrating her boyfriend’s mother’s birthday.
She’d been dating her 37-year-old boyfriend for over a year and had worked to build a respectful bond with his 5-year-old daughter. But when the child repeatedly tapped her on the head, and she calmly admitted she felt “a bit disrespected,” his response floored her. Instead of stepping in, he said, “Too bad,” then told his daughter to keep doing it, jokingly, but in a way the child took seriously.
Later, in private, his reaction escalated into something even more troubling. Was she being too sensitive, or had she just uncovered a deeper problem?
One woman’s attempt to set a boundary at a family dinner turned into a relationship clash when her boyfriend dismissed her feelings and issued a shocking ultimatum













OP’s post isn’t about a five-year-old tapping her on the head, it’s about a partner’s reaction when she calmly set a boundary. The key moment wasn’t the physical annoyance, it was when OP answered his question honestly (“Yeah, I kind of do”) and he replied with “Too bad,” followed by encouraging the behavior. That’s not just dismissive, it’s undermining.
In healthy co-parenting/relationship dynamics, there’s a concept called protective partnership, you don’t have to agree with your partner in the moment, but you avoid publicly embarrassing or invalidating them. Instead, you discuss it later. By joking at OP’s expense and doubling down in private with “I’ll just keep my daughter away from you,” he escalated a small moment into an implied threat to the relationship.
According to relationship researcher Dr. John Gottman, one of the “Four Horsemen” predicting relationship failure is contempt, mocking, belittling, or dismissing your partner’s feelings in front of others. That behavior erodes trust faster than disagreement itself.
Also worth noting: removal threats (“I’ll keep her away from you”) aren’t problem-solving, they’re avoidance strategies. Instead of teaching his child respectful interaction or collaborating with OP, he’s signaling that any boundary she sets will be met with exclusion. Over time, this pattern can create an environment where OP feels she must tolerate all behavior to avoid being iced out.
OP’s instincts are valid, this isn’t about being “too sensitive,” it’s about recognizing a communication style that punishes vulnerability. If left unchecked, the same pattern will likely appear in other areas, not just parenting moments.
Suggestions:
- Address the pattern, not just the tapping incident. Make it clear that the core issue is dismissiveness, not discipline style.
- Watch for repeated use of withdrawal/exclusion as conflict management—this is often a control tactic.
- If both want the relationship to last, a neutral third party (therapist) could help bridge the parenting-partnering gap before resentment cements.
Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:
These Redditors slammed his disrespect, calling his ultimatum manipulative and urging her to leave



These users flagged his immaturity as a parent and partner, noting even his mother saw the issue


These users flagged his immaturity as a parent and partner, noting even his mother saw the issue




These commenters questioned why she didn’t redirect the child but emphasized his response as the bigger problem







While OP framed the incident as a “small thing,” the response it triggered revealed a bigger problem, one that isn’t about the child at all, but about how her boyfriend handles conflict and boundaries. Dismissing her feelings and framing her as a future “threat” to his relationship with his daughter suggests a lack of respect and partnership.
For many commenters, this wasn’t a matter of sensitivity, but a bright, flashing warning sign. The question now is whether OP takes it seriously or keeps hoping it was just an off night.








