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Father Calls Out Son’s Ugly Behavior, Husband Gets Mad About “Tone” In Front Of In-Laws

by Annie Nguyen
December 2, 2025
in Social Issues

Parenting a preteen can feel like trying to read a book in a language that keeps changing. One moment, everything is calm and predictable, and the next, you’re dealing with sharp comments or behavior that cuts far deeper than kids realize.

Many parents learn quickly that the hardest moments don’t happen in private but right in front of the people whose opinions matter most.

That’s exactly what happened to one father who’s been working hard to build stability and structure for his soon-to-be adopted son. The kid has been testing limits lately, and not gently.

Things eventually came to a head when visiting family witnessed yet another moment of disrespect. What followed left the dad wondering if he handled things badly or if he simply hit his breaking point. Scroll down to see what pushed him over the edge.

A frustrated parent reaches a breaking point when a preteen’s insults escalate in front of visiting in-laws

Father Calls Out Son’s Ugly Behavior, Husband Gets Mad About “Tone” In Front Of In-Laws
Not the actual photo

'AITA: My 12 year old has been mouthing “f*** you” and “you little s***” to me all day with my in-laws present?'

AITA: My husband and I (gay male) are in the process of adopting a 12 year old son.

I think the family dynamics are slowly settling and I’m seen as the more “stricter” (I.e. probably overbearing) type that tries to provide routine, structure and safety to my child.

My husband does the same but being an LCSW he takes a different approach.

I do have anxiety and can get flustered easily which has always been my personal struggle since my teenage years.

For the past few weeks/month or two my son constantly mouths “f* you” to me all the time with a smirk on his face.

My husband is OBLIVIOUS to these types of boundary pushes even when I ask him to pay a little more attention.

Cut to this weekend. My in-laws are up for the long weekend.

We went out to an outdoor festival for the day and all day my son continues to push my boundaries, refusing to listen,

mouthing “f* you and “you little s__t” and ignoring anything I ask.

I tried putting up with it all day until this evening.

Originally I told him bedtime was 8:15pm but then my husband told him he can stay up until 9:15pm without telling me.

Which is fine and wasn’t my frustration.

Well we are all sitting in the living room and when it’s time for my son to go to bed, I keep stating “ok it’s bedtime”.

He ignores me until I repeat myself a few times and the turns to me and mouth “f*** you” with my husband and in-laws sitting right there.

I finally got fed up and yelled “it’s time for bed” and he went off to bed with my husband tucking him in.

My husband is pissed for how I presented myself in front of his parents but I’m super upset and

annoyed at how my son continues to speak to me and was just finally exhausted from it.

I took the PS5 away and locked it in my office until I feel he can start straighten himself up. Was I in the wrong?

Should I have just taken it until everyone went to bed and just removed the PS5?

I feel like I should have done that. But was I the a__hole who flipped out in front of everyone?

Children often challenge the person they feel safest with. Not because they want to hurt them, but because they are still learning how to manage emotions and express fear, frustration, and uncertainty.

When those emotional storms collide with a parent who is already stretched thin, even small moments can turn into something overwhelming.

In this situation, the poster wasn’t simply reacting to one disrespectful comment. He was juggling the fragile dynamics of adopting a preteen, managing his own anxiety, and trying to maintain authority while feeling undermined. For weeks, his son had been testing limits not quietly, but with deliberate, stinging defiance.

The pressure finally intensified when the in-laws were present and his husband unintentionally contradicted him. What erupted wasn’t just anger; it was the exhaustion of a parent trying to hold a boundary alone.

The story also reveals that many children in transitional or adoptive situations push hardest against the parent they perceive as the “stricter” or more emotionally reactive figure.

While some observers might view his raised voice as losing control, another interpretation is possible: the son was seeking clarity, consistency, and proof that limits still exist even when emotions run high.

Meanwhile, the father was caught between the instinct to nurture a child with a difficult past and the need to protect his own emotional well-being.

Psychology Today explains that children often test rules, boundaries, and authority figures as part of normal child development. They may act out to explore emotional limits, express underlying stress, or challenge inconsistencies in the household structure

This insight helps illuminate what happened. The child wasn’t simply being cruel; he was navigating adoption-related anxiety, shifting household dynamics, and uncertainty about his role in the family.

His behavior, however inappropriate, was rooted in emotional confusion, not malice. And the father’s reaction did not come from impulsive anger, but from reaching the end of an emotional rope after feeling ignored, contradicted, and disrespected in front of others.

The takeaway isn’t about whether the father yelled. The deeper issue is the lack of unified parenting and shared emotional labor. When one parent enforces boundaries while the other inadvertently softens or overrides them, the child learns which adult is easier to push.

A realistic way forward is not perfect communication but a consistent partnership. When both parents align expectations and support each other’s authority, the child gains stability, and the burden no longer falls on one overwhelmed parent trying to stand alone.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These commenters believe OP is not at fault and the husband causes most issues

otisandme − NTA but your husband is. You need to pull your husband and son aside

when this happens and have a brief chat about what is happening, rather than waiting until the end of the day when you have a melt  down.

You and your husband need to agree on the ground rules. What will happen when your son dies this the next time?

And start having you and your husband tell your son ahead of time, what is going yo happen if it happens again.

You need to both agree on consequences and tell your son together.

Then if it happens again, talk to your husband right away. And enforce it together

No-Tiger-6694 − You’re NTA, but it should have been very obvious to you that adopting a child who is 12 years old

will come with a lot of behavioral problems, whether he was in foster care since an infant, or was dropped off at an older age,

he has a lot of trauma, that will take years to unpack and work through.

He is most likely going to need mental health counseling and support.

I fully understand your explosion and probably would have done the same thing

, but I don’t think it will be productive, or help him at all if it becomes a regular thing.

You need to have things for yourself that you can do to disconnect and destress, you need to be able to pull yourself out of the situation,

breathe and remember that he is just a child who has been through a tremendous amount of hardship. Good luck!

Umpatothelumpa − NTA. I have worked at a child and adolescent residential facility and psychiatric unit.

A 12 year old is a lot to take on as first time parents and especially for parents that are clearly not on the same page.

Almost every child in a residential facility is challenging.

It’s common for them to push boundaries, act out, display manipulative behavior and develop a slew of mental health issues stemming from abandonment, n__lect and trauma.

Residential facilities are typically very structured, routine and strict for a reason.

A lot of children in residential do not respond to “gentle parenting” because it’s something that is so foreign to them. They need firm limits and boundaries.

They need to understand that you are a person as well and have your own boundaries they need to respect.

He is already at an age where he can comprehend these things.

If you and your husband are unable to work out a parenting plan moving forward, that child is doomed.

His behaviors will only worsen as he gets older, bigger, and stronger.

Today he is mouthing “f*** you” to you; tomorrow it could be a teacher, his grandparents, or random people on the street.

Don’t let the fact that a child has trauma make you give him passes. You can be empathetic and sympathetic while also providing tough love.

VoomVoomBoomer − Dude, you have a husband problem. Husband is having good times being the "fun parent", while you take the s__t & resentments

If you two not going to align your parenting tactics and be on the same page, things will only get worst

Impossible-Tutor-799 − You have a husband problem.

buymorebestsellers − Why don't you call him out straight away on his behaviour?

He's doing this because he thinks you won't cause a scene. Why aren't you involving your partner? As soon as he does it.

verytime. "Did you just mouth" f__k off"? Why did you do that?

NTA but you've missed out on years of parenting that would develop over time since birth,

maybe the two of you need counselling about setting boundaries and supporting each other in a united front.

These commenters think both OP and the husband contribute to the problem

Tiny_Shelter440 - ESH. The PS5 is unrelated to the behavior and won't improve it.

Your husband needs to not undermine you about little things, but you also need to not repeat yourself or be the enforcer (bedtime).

Your husband set the new time, the child knew the time and so did your husband.

The child is testing the limits and your bond and you adults need to be together on calm consistency.

Once your husband changed the bedtime it was impossible for you to follow through on it and it was up to your husband.

As for the swearing and name calling to provoke you - this is basic foster/foster to adopt.

Ignore the mouthing not because the disrespect doesn’t matter but legitimately because it isn’t about you.

It’s about the reasons he’s in foster care, your role in his life, the fact that so much of his life is out of control, and adults in his life...

Don’t let him split between the adults. But you probably also need to ask for less right now.

You can’t be the ‘overbearing’ one. No one needs to be that role. 12 is rough on a good day, to be and to parent.

What do you like about your son?  Focus a ton on that.  Mention that to your husband too, every day.

If you’re on this path, support one another on it.

Brainjacker − ESH. You and your husband are not on the same team and this will ultimately fail your kid.

These commenters say OP’s rules and reactions are too strict and inappropriate

coraheat − I'm not saying YTA but it sounds like your attempts to provide structure are extremely rigid and inappropriate for his age.

8:15 bedtime for a 12 yo is wild. 9:15 is pretty strict, too. You're treating him like he's 6 and he's gonna hate you for it.

Sounds like ya'll would benefit from some family therapy and doing a little research into developmentally appropriate routines.

Reddit didn’t paint OP as a villain, just a stressed parent trying to navigate a high-stakes

new family dynamic with imperfect tools and uneven support.

Many urged compassion for the son, who is likely testing whether this new home is truly safe,

while also stressing that the parents must get on the same page fast.

Yelling wasn’t ideal, but understandable. The bigger issue is misaligned parenting styles and unspoken resentment.

What do you think? Was OP justified in snapping after hours of being silently cursed at, or should he have handled things differently?

Would you have lost your cool too?

[Reddit User] − YBTA. If your child is saying "F__k you you little s__t" to you, you don't know

how to deal with that and your husband doesn't see the problem the two of you need professional help with parenting real fast.

Adopting a kid is actually more difficult than raising one of your own, especially when adopting a 12 year old starting puberty.

This requires extra attention.

Punishing him by taking away his PS5 is only effective if he understands cause and effect, which you have to explain to him.

If you just got angry and grabbed his PS5 out of frustration it's more likely to build up resentment than discipline him.

These commenters believe everyone is struggling through a difficult adjustment

corgihuntress − I think you and your husband need to talk about a unified plan of action to handle this.

Your son is pushing boundaries, as is natural.

I would also talk to a therapist who specializes in adoption because your son could

also be testing you to find out if he can push you away in other words, at what point will you decide not to love him?

I wouldn't be surprised if that's in there, though I don't know the circumstances of the adoption or any of that sort of thing.

Losing your temper is understandable but as the parent, you have to try to be the adult.

I'm going NAH because y'all are navigating a difficult situation.

Equivalent-Board206 − You need something to change, so change something.

The next time your son mouths something mean to you, reread it as "I love you", ruffle his hair and tell him that you love him too.

Every time. Especially if your in-laws are around. Tell them how wonderful your son is. Praise your son regularly.

For example: "f* you" = "love you" "You little s*" = "you little sweet" Expect your son to push boundaries, but acknowledge that that's what he's doing.

If bedtime is at 9:15, say "okay, it's bedtime".

If he ignores you and you repeat yourself and he ignores you again, ask your husband to put him to bed.

Don't forget to tell him you love him.

Your kid wants you to reject him, because if you reject him before he starts to care about you,

then he saved himself all that pain, and he was right not to get his hopes up.

It's a survival strategy. Tomorrow, after the in-laws have gone, apologise to your son for yelling at him last night.

Give him back the ps5 and thank him for anything he did well while the in-laws were visiting.

For example, maybe he got them tea and coffee, or maybe he listened well and didn't interrupt when they were talking, etc.

Reward the good behaviour, try to ignore the bad behaviour. Also, talk to your husband.

He might not see this disrespect but you both need to be on the same page about these things.

NAH Edit: there are lots of excellent points made in response to this comment.

Bad behaviour, in general, should be dealt with appropriately with reasonable boundaries.

These commenters offer general advice without assigning a clear vote

Kris82868 − I don't know what his situation was before you adopting him.

But 12 and an 815 bedtime on the weekend? I mean at that age I didn't even have one on a school night.

Is he pushing boundaries in response to them being so severe?

ArreniaQ − Ask yourself: Why are we adopting a 12-year-old child from a residential center?

Every time he does something annoying remind yourself why you have chosen to include him in your life. EVERY TIME!

He's a child hitting puberty, I'm a retired teacher and am here to tell you, 12-year-olds through

at least 18 and for some till age 30 are miserable people because their brains are awash in changes and hormones. They cannot think or reason or understand.

That's the best of them that don't have a history of abuse, n__lect, abandonment, or anything else that this child has experienced.

You have to control yourself. Tell yourself, whatever he does, do not yell!

He's probably been yelled at all his life, and kids who have been yelled out know to just tune out the annoying sound.

Maintain a quiet voice and calm face.

You and your husband need to agree about times and expectations.

Do not be the stricter one, if your husband doesn't agree with your expectations, you two are going to destroy any potential relationship

with the child because children figure out quickly how to play adults against each other. Best wishes, remember: peace, calm, quiet, soothing.

nycgarbagewhore − This is way above AITA's pay grade.

You guys need to consult professionals on how to manage new family dynamics, adoption, and parenting.

This situation shows how messy parenting becomes when trauma, boundary-testing, and mismatched discipline styles collide in one living room.

OP wasn’t just dealing with a rude comment; he was juggling a child’s fear of attachment, a partner who sent mixed signals, and the pressure of performing in front of in-laws.

Some people will say he snapped because he cared; others might argue he let frustration speak louder than strategy. What do you think? Was taking the PS5 a fair boundary, or did OP lose control at the wrong moment? Drop your thoughts below!

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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