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New Dad Considers Giving Custody To Grandparents, Internet Calls Him Heartless

by Marry Anna
February 1, 2026
in Social Issues

Few decisions carry as much emotional weight as those involving a child’s future. When grief is layered on top of new parenthood, clarity can feel impossible, and every option comes with judgment attached.

In this case, a young man became a single father under tragic circumstances. He handled immediate responsibilities, leaned on family support, and remained present in his daughter’s life.

Still, as months passed, doubts crept in about whether he could offer the consistency she deserves right now.

New Dad Considers Giving Custody To Grandparents, Internet Calls Him Heartless
Not the actual photo

'AITA for considering giving my daughter’s grandparents full custody after her mom died during childbirth?'

I (M26) My girlfriend died from complications during childbirth, leaving me to raise our daughter alone.

That’s not something I expected or prepared for, but it’s the situation I’m in.

In the first few weeks, I handled what needed to be handled.

I made medical decisions, took care of the funeral, and made sure my daughter was safe.

Pretty quickly, though, I realized that trying to do everything on my own while grieving wasn’t sustainable.

I wasn’t sleeping, my head wasn’t clear, and I wasn’t going to pretend that “pushing through” automatically made me a better father.

My girlfriend’s parents stepped in and offered to care for my daughter temporarily. They’re stable, experienced, and deeply invested in her.

She’s been with them for a while now, and she’s thriving. I’m still involved.

I visit regularly, contribute financially, and have a say in decisions, but the day-to-day responsibility isn’t on me right now.

The longer this goes on, the more I’ve had to be honest with myself.

I love my daughter, but I’m not sure I’m in the best position to be a full-time single parent, at least not anytime soon.

Her grandparents can give her consistency, a built-in support system, and a calm home that I can’t fully offer right now.

I’ve started thinking about whether giving them full custody might actually be the most responsible long-term decision, with me remaining actively involved in her life.

This wouldn’t be about disappearing; it would be a legal arrangement to give her stability while I continue to be present and supportive.

Some people say even considering this makes me a bad father, that a “real dad” would never think about giving up custody.

Others say it’s better to choose what’s best for the child instead of holding onto a role I’m not ready to fill just to satisfy expectations.

I’m not running from responsibility. I’m trying to make a clear-headed decision about my daughter’s future, not my pride. AITA?

Losing a partner during childbirth is an unfathomable tragedy, and the OP’s question about possibly giving his daughter’s grandparents full custody reflects a deeply thoughtful, if emotionally fraught, assessment of what might be best for his child in the long term.

He is not seeking to abandon his daughter, rather, he is weighing his current capacity to parent alone against the potential stability and support a kinship caregiving arrangement might offer.

When a child’s biological parent cannot fulfill the primary caregiving role, families often turn to grandparents or other close kin to provide continuity of care.

This phenomenon, sometimes called “grandfamilies”, occurs when grandparents step in as surrogate parents due to parental illness, disability, incarceration, death, or other major life disruptions.

In such scenarios, grandparents take on significant responsibility not just for day-to-day needs but also for emotional and developmental support.

Research shows that children raised by grandparents frequently benefit from attachment stability and familiar familial bonds.

A study investigating relationships between grandparents and grandchildren found that stronger grandparent support was associated with positive emotional outcomes for children, particularly in family crisis contexts like divorce or separation.

This suggests the OP’s concern for his daughter’s stability and emotional well-being is grounded in evidence: close grandparent relationships can be a protective factor when parents face challenges.

At the same time, the literature consistently underscores that custodial caregiving can exert significant strain on grandparents themselves.

A systematic review of grandparenting outcomes found that in roughly two-thirds of custodial grandparent scenarios, the intense caregiving role correlated with decreased health and well-being for the grandparents compared to non-custodial caregivers.

Likewise, research on “grandfamilies” indicates that grandparents raising grandchildren often face elevated stress, emotional burdens, and even socioeconomic challenges, even while providing a nurturing environment for the children.

Such findings illustrate that transitioning custody is not a simple fix; it alters the responsibilities and life paths of everyone involved.

In addition to the well-being of caregivers, there are broader socioeconomic considerations.

Grandparent-headed households are statistically more likely to face poverty, access barriers to social safety net programs, and have fewer supports designed for non-traditional family configurations.

These barriers can complicate what is otherwise a loving and stable environment, requiring thoughtful planning and potentially outside support systems.

Guidance in situations like this generally emphasizes thoughtful planning rather than impulsive decisions.

Experts often recommend exploring legal guardianship or kinship custody arrangements that give grandparents the authority needed for day-to-day care while preserving the biological parent’s rights and involvement, allowing stability without severing bonds.

Consulting with family law professionals and child welfare specialists can help clarify responsibilities, access financial or social supports, and ensure decisions reflect the child’s best interests.

Equally important is maintaining consistent, meaningful contact between parent and child through regular visits and participation in decisions, which supports attachment and emotional security.

Framing custody as a flexible, evolving arrangement rather than a permanent relinquishment may allow the family to adapt as circumstances change, ensuring the child’s needs remain central while honoring the realities of grief, capacity, and long-term well-being.

Ultimately, the OP’s thoughtfulness reflects a commitment to his daughter’s future rather than a lack of love.

Considering whether grandparents might offer greater consistency is not inherently wrong, many families across the world make similar decisions in the context of profound loss or hardship.

What matters most is that the child’s emotional security, attachment needs, and best interests remain central, while caregivers old and young are supported, protected, and provided with resources that help the entire family thrive.

Here are the comments of Reddit users:

These users took a cautious, compassionate stance.

Odd-End-1405 − Have they even ASKED to keep the child permanently? This may not be what they are capable of doing.

They may not want to do it and will feel guilted into it, which will lead to resentment of the child.

You are NTA for wanting what is best for your child, but understand, this is NOT something you can just undo later without harm to the child.

You deciding in 5-10 years you are "ready" to be a dad and trying to take her back will be extremely damaging and selfish.

Talk to a therapist. Talk to the grandparents.

 

 

You need to make sure the decision is what EVERYONE wants and is what is best for the child. I am so very sorry for your loss. NAH.

According_Pizza8484 − I think this is beyond Reddit's pay grade and not really an AITAH situation.

My only advice would be to take some time to think this over, right now you're o__rwhelmed and grieving, and you might

want to avoid doing something you might regret later when you're feeling more stable and yourself, things will be a lot

messier if you change your mind later in your life when you're in a different place and new custody arrangements have been established.

Your daughter might grow up to feel rejected by you later on as well, even if you're still involved, if you move on and start

a new family with someone else down the road. Is this something you're really prepared for?

If you don't need to make a decision about this in the near future i suggest sitting on it for a while.

It might ultimately be what's best for your daughter, but there's a lot to consider, and you should do it with

a clear head, rather than at the peak of your grief imo.

This group focused on responsibility and long-term impact.

Chainsawjack − If you aren't in the best position to be a dad...change your life, mate.

Once you have a kid, you aren't the main character anymore.

Rely on their support, yes, but don't distance yourself from the critical role of a parent; that is something that sadly only you can fill.

Your daughter will grow up to wonder why you couldn't do what hundreds of other single dads have done.

Why was shen't good enough or important enough for you to choose her over your own comfort and convenience?

These may not feel to you like fair characterizations of your situation, but your daughter will feel that pain at some moment, and you will own it.

You have taken a moment to pick up the pieces, mate, now... go forge them into a new life with your daughter.

You can do it, man, don't say I can't, just roll with I figure it out.

No parent is ideal; we all make mistakes, but you have to put in the time. You have to show up.

If you are anything like me, when you held your baby in your arms for the first time, you made her promises either verbally or in your head and in...

Go keep them. I know it's hard, man. That's life. Suffering is guaranteed, but regrets are often chosen.

The final question that I feel we all must ask ourselves when faced with a decision is... is that the kind of man I want to be?

nw826 − I work in education. Kids who have living parents who leave them with their grandparents tend to have

a lot of behavioral issues, which I’m guessing stem from feeling abandoned.

I know this is only anecdotal, but I’d be very hesitant to do this if I were you.

Also consider age. If the grandparents start to have health issues, raising a kid isn’t going to help their health,

and if they die, then the kid will be back with you, and you’ll have a harder adjustment because you didn’t raise them.

And she’ll have a harder adjustment because she just lost who she considers her parents.

Finally, imagine yourself in your daughter’s situation, how would you feel about your dad if he did that to you?

It’s your call, but really think about how this will affect your daughter’s mental health as she gets older.

The last thing you want is a daughter with daddy issues.

carlosrevenge − I'm 27, and I'm going to be 28 this year. I'm a single dad of 3 boys.

You need to step up, full stop, and get a support system (therapy).

I was 20 when I had my first child, and he now goes to school.

My second will be going to school this year. My youngest is running around and climbing.

This doesn't get easier; it just changes, and you need to adapt. The first is always gonna be hard.

Everything changes, and you will be tired. Every parent goes through it; you will survive.

Not minimizing how you feel, but your in-laws lost their daughter. Had to bury their child and are still stepping up through their grief.

Please op think about the next 10 years, first steps, words, smiles, snuggles, school projects, and assemblies.

From 1 dad to another, don't make the complicated mistakes. A lot of things in life are simple. It's just hard, but it is worth it.

These commenters accused OP of reframing personal fear as “what’s best for the child” and argued that grief does not erase parental duty.

anewfaceinthecrowd − YTA. And I'm gonna be honest with you.  Instead of holding onto a role I’m not ready to fill just to satisfy expectations.

Aaah...but here's the thing. By raising your own child, you won't be "holding onto a role just to satisfy expectations".

You will simply be a parent to the child YOU chose to bring into this world.

That is not an unreasonable expectation. Listen. I am so sorry for your loss.

But you have a child. You are a parent. Women do this single-parenting thing all the time.

Many times they have to because way too many men bail when they realise they didn't actually really want to be

a parent, but just liked the idea of "having a baby" and end up leaving the actual child care and real parenting to the woman.

Now, suddenly, the person you thought was going to actually care for the baby (that you wanted) is gone.

She literally sacrificed HER LIFE to give you a child. And now you don't really want it anyway because she isn't here to raise it (for you).

You try to justify it by coming up with reasons that sound fair enough.

But all a child really wants is the love and closeness and day-to-day life with their real parents. And you're it, buddy.

That a “real dad” would never think about giving up custody. You ARE a "real dad".

You are the only parent she has. Yes, you will have to give up your freedom and "young man life style" to raise your child.

That is what people do and sign up for when they decide to create children.

Even if your girlfriend had lived, that is what is fairly expected of you.

You seem to want to reduce yourself to someone who visits "regularly" but can't really see yourself caring

for a teething baby or the day-to-day life with a toddler.

But by leaving all the hard stuff to the grandparents, you are robbing yourself and your daughter of something invaluable.

You will be missing out on time and memories that you will NEVER get back.

And worse: you will also be denying your own child of all the many amazing everyday moments and memories that

she should be experiencing with her daddy as she grows up. She can be happy with her grandparents.

But she will always know that you were a fair-weather dad who showed up when it was convenient for you,

but wasn't there when she had a fever or a bad dream or a bad day at school.

This r__ection of her will affect her deeply for the rest of her life. Don't do that to her. She didn't ask to be born.

You, on the other hand, asked for a child. She is here. Now, go be a parent to your child.

Vast-Fortune-1583 − YTA: I'll get downvoted. If you died, I guarantee your gf wouldn't be saying she can't handle being a mom.

You were grown enough to get a woman pregnant, and now you can't handle it.

It's time to grow up. Quit spinning this, that's it's best for the child. It's best for you.

If you don't want to be a dad, then put your baby up for adoption. Then step away. This child deserves far better than you.

ninjagarcia − You have help and still want to give your daughter away?

As a father this pisses me off and you are the a__hole. Grow up, get therapy, and raise your daughter.

Her mom died, and her dad wants to give her away.

MZsince93 − Oh, to be a man. Imagine if this were a single mom.

arkha4813 − YTA, you chose to have a child, whatever happens (and a very sad thing happened to you), that doesn't relieve you from your responsibility.

HanaMashida − Sorry for your loss but respectfully, you need to put on your big boy panties and get your s__t together.

Your girlfriend's parents have lost their literal child, the person that they created and raised.

They have experienced the very unfortunate heartbreak of burying a child. And yet, they are strong enough to raise YOUR CHILD.

Having them raise the child that you brought into this world is WILDLY unfair.

I see nothing wrong with having them take the baby for a short period of time to work through grief and get your ducks in a row, but long-term? Absolutely...

You're NTA for taking a small amount of time, but you're the AH if you have no plan, and you will DEFINITELY

be the AH if you have no time to raise your child, but you have time for dating.

This smaller cluster raised pointed reality checks.

Equivalent_Score4396 − Would your girlfriend have done this if you were the one who had passed?

Anonymoosehead123 − How old are the grandparents, and what is their health status?

I think you need to consider those two issues before making a final decision.

Your daughter doesn’t need to lose 3 parental figures while she’s still a child.

Offering a stark but nuanced take, this commenter argued that giving up custody does make OP a bad father, but forcing himself into a role he resents could be worse.

toastedmarsh7 − Giving up custody because parenting is “too hard” would make you a bad father, yeah.

That’s just giving up your fatherhood entirely and choosing instead to be more of a visiting uncle type.

That doesn’t mean it’s not the right decision. If you’re not willing to do what it takes to prioritize her and

give her a good life, then you should give up custody to someone who is willing to be a good parent to her.

It sounds like you expected your girlfriend to handle most of the parenting duties while you “helped,” and you

are not willing to take on that role now that she’s gone.

Speaking from lived experience, this user highlighted the lasting emotional consequences of early separation from a parent.

truth_fairy78 − I was raised by my grandmother for the first 5 years of my life before my parents immigrated to the US, and I never saw her again.

I have very limited emotional attachment to my parents to this day and lingering abandonment issues.

Think long and hard about what you expect out of your relationship with your child bc what you decide now will affect her for the rest of her life.

I guarantee she will wonder why you left her in the first place and didn’t do everything to come back to her as quickly as possible.

Kids are resilient, but only to a point. NTA, and I’m so sorry for your loss.

This story cuts deeper than most AITA debates. The Redditor isn’t choosing between comfort and effort; he’s weighing grief, capacity, and a child’s long-term stability.

Is being a good parent always about doing everything yourself, or about knowing when support matters more than pride? Would you see this as abandonment or as quiet responsibility in action? 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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