Divorce rarely affects only the couple involved. When a marriage ends, the relationships built with in-laws, family traditions, and years of shared memories can suddenly become much more complicated than anyone expected.
The original poster had considered his son’s former wife part of the family throughout her marriage and even took on a parental role because of her difficult childhood. After the divorce, however, he believed it was time to step back and let everyone move on.
When his former daughter-in-law reached out asking why she was no longer included, the conversation quickly turned emotional and ended with both sides feeling hurt. Read on to find out what happened.
A mother cut ties with her son’s ex-wife after the divorce, despite her pleading to stay connected






















Some relationships end with a signature on legal paperwork, but the emotional ties surrounding them rarely disappear overnight. Divorce often separates more than two spouses.
It can also dissolve bonds with in-laws who once felt like family, leaving people grieving not only a marriage but an entire support system they thought would always remain part of their lives.
In this situation, the disagreement was not simply about invitations to family gatherings. It reflected two very different understandings of what their relationship had become after the divorce.
The OP viewed the end of the marriage as the natural end of his parental role toward his son’s former wife, particularly because the divorce had become contentious and his son would likely feel hurt if contact continued.
Sam, however, was mourning more than the loss of a husband. Having grown up without a stable family, she had built emotional security within her former in-laws and appeared to experience their distance as another abandonment. Neither perspective is difficult to understand. The problem was that each person was responding to a different kind of loss.
A different psychological perspective is that people often assume family roles disappear as quickly as legal relationships. In reality, emotional attachment follows a different timeline.
For someone who grew up with instability, losing an entire family network may reactivate earlier experiences of rejection, making ordinary boundaries feel intensely personal.
At the same time, maintaining a close relationship with an adult child’s former spouse can create loyalty conflicts, especially when the divorce ended badly. Compassion for someone’s loneliness does not automatically create an obligation to continue a relationship that now conflicts with another important family bond.
Psychologist Dr. Pauline Boss, known for her work on ambiguous loss, explains that some losses are especially difficult because the people involved are still alive while their roles in our lives have fundamentally changed. This type of loss often creates confusion about expectations, belonging, and how relationships should continue.
Verywell Mind similarly notes that healthy boundaries sometimes require accepting that caring about someone’s pain is different from remaining responsible for meeting their emotional needs. Both empathy and limits can exist at the same time.
Viewed through that lens, the OP’s decision to step back after the divorce appears consistent with the new family dynamic, particularly given his son’s feelings and the difficult ending of the marriage. However, the statement that Sam’s lack of family was “not my issue” likely intensified an already painful conversation.
While it may have reflected a desire to establish firm boundaries, it also communicated emotional distance to someone who was already grieving multiple losses. Boundaries are often necessary, but the way they are expressed can shape whether another person experiences them as respectful closure or personal rejection.
Divorce frequently forces people to choose between preserving old connections and protecting new boundaries. The healthiest path is usually one that combines honesty with compassion, recognizing another person’s grief without promising a relationship that can no longer realistically continue.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
This group emphasized the ex-DIL’s hardships—miscarriages, divorce, and lack of family—arguing OP should show more empathy and maintain some contact






























These users supported OP, highlighting that the ex-DIL’s entitlement and prior actions do not obligate OP to maintain a relationship, and prioritizing the son’s well-being is reasonable



















This group criticized OP for seeming harsh, questioning how abruptly cutting ties disregards the ex-DIL’s past role and emotional struggles








What do you think? Share your thoughts in comments!

















