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Traumatized Woman Who Witnessed Mother’s Birth Warns Excited Stranger Couple, Shocking Their Baby Dream

by Jeffrey Stone
December 2, 2025
in Social Issues

A family reunion chat froze solid when a 24-year-old woman, traumatized from witnessing her baby brother’s chaotic birth at age 6, couldn’t hold back. As an excited couple raved about letting their firstborn watch the delivery for that “magical” moment, her blunt warning about lifelong trauma dropped like a bomb.

Jaws hit the floor, phones blew up with backlash, turning heartfelt excitement into hilariously awkward fallout. Reddit’s split on this delivery room zinger, raw honesty or uninvited party crash?

Overhearing a family’s intention to make the firstborn witness the mother giving birth, woman warns them, preventing the child’s life-long trauma.

Traumatized Woman Who Witnessed Mother's Birth Warns Excited Stranger Couple, Shocking Their Baby Dream
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for "ruining the birth of their child" for a couple I don't know?'

I (24f) was unfortunate enough to witness my brother's birth when I was 6. Front row and all, I was the first person to carry him in the hospital room.

To be honest, I don't remember anything expect how horrific that memory is.

My parents have apologized and we have made peace with it, they thought it would be cute for me to see my brother first,

it wasn't, they said sorry and we moved on.

The rest of my family hasn't moved on. They still think it's absolutely bonkers I don't think it's a magical moment.

Fast forward to now, I'm visiting my aunts and uncles during one of their reunions

and a couple that's friends with one of them are talking about how excited they are about the birth of their kid.

I say nothing. They keep talking until I heard how they are also planning to have their first kid in the delivery room with the mom

to have "an experience like I have". My aunt goes pale and before she could deflect I said "If what you want is traumatize that kid for life, be my...

The couple is silent and my aunt quickly shifts the topic about other birth and baby things and my uncles ask me to go eat something over there.

I understand when I'm being dismissed so I ate some more food and left for the night.

After that, my extended family is blowing up my phone about how I ruined the birth of their kid for the couple

and how now they are feeling like s__t and bad parents.

I think I saved another poor kids eyes but it also wasn't my place since I don't know them. So, AITA?.

Edit because it's getting hard to follow:

1. My extended family manages the hospital ward. I don't know if kids are banned or not, but if they are I assume they don't do anything about it.

2. My story gets shared with anyone who listens as an example of an excellent sibling bonding opportunity.

3. They are all are very much aware of my thoughts on birth and that particular memory.

The birth of a new family member always sounds wonderful, only if you don’t literally look at the event. Such witnessing could probably traumatize a fully grown adult, let alone a child, whose innocence must be protected at all cost.

For instance, in this story, our Redditor dropped a truth bomb that rippled through the room, leaving a couple second-guessing their big baby plan and her relatives fuming.

At the heart of it: Should a young child really get a front-row seat to the raw intensity of childbirth, all in the name of “sibling bonding”?

At just 6 years old, she was thrust into a scene straight out of a medical drama, complete with sights and sounds that no kid’s bedtime story prepared her for.

Fast-forward nearly two decades, and she’s made peace with her parents, but the memory still packs a punch.

When the couple raved about mirroring her “experience,” her reflexive warning was a knee-jerk reflex from someone who’s lived the fallout.

Her family, who run the local hospital ward and peddle her story as sibling gold, knew her stance yet let the conversation barrel forward. No wonder her aunt went pale.

Flip the script to the couple’s perspective, and it’s easy to see the sting. They were riding high on excitement, envisioning a Hallmark moment of family unity.

Yet, here’s the satirical twist: If their dream hinges so delicately on one comment, maybe it needed a gentle nudge toward reality anyway.

Childbirth isn’t a Pixar short. It’s a whirlwind of unpredictability, from triumphant cries to unexpected interventions. The Redditor didn’t invent the chaos, she just voiced what experts have long cautioned against.

Broadening this out, the debate taps into bigger family dynamics around “involving” kids in major life events.

According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, young children under 10 often lack the emotional maturity to process high-stress medical scenarios without lingering effects.

A 2019 study in the Journal of Pediatric Psychology found that exposure to parental distress in medical settings can heighten anxiety in siblings for months afterward. It’s not about robbing kids of magic, it’s about protecting their innocence until they’re ready.

Renowned child psychologist Dr. Laura Markham, author of Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids, notes on Aha! Parenting: “Children thrive when they feel secure, not when they’re witnesses to vulnerability they can’t yet comprehend. Forcing sibling presence at birth can backfire, creating unintended distance rather than closeness”.

Spot-on for our Redditor’s saga: her honesty might’ve spared a kid the same foggy nightmare, even if delivery was blunt.

Maybe if the Redditor had led with her own story: “I was there for my brother’s birth, and honestly, it shook me, maybe wait until they’re older?”, it would have softened the blow while planting the seed.

For families, to prevent similar situations, chat openly about boundaries instead of scripting fairy tales.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Many users assert birth is traumatic for children to witness and OP provided necessary truth.

MercifulOtter − NTA. I honestly can't fathom wanting your child to witness their parent in pain just for them to see the "miracle of birth".

That's extremely traumatizing for a child. You were honest with them about the experience.

They needed to know it isn't all sunshine and daisies for the child experiencing this.

Plantsnob − NTA and anyone that doesn't think birth is traumatic is bonkers.

It involves lots of pain, lots of blood, and in many cases a lot of medical intervention to deal with or prevent major complications.

Woman produces hormones that help them deal with the trauma of producing a whole human.

Everyone else present has to just deal with it and adults can make that informed consent

but a kid really doesn't get to and it sounds like the adults need that reality check.

Few_Ad_5752 − NTA, but your family continues to be the thoughtless AHs that you always knew they were.

The number of times it's been a good idea to have little children in the delivery room can probably be counted on the fingers of one finger.

You saved a child from trauma, and you saved some parents for making a mistake that they could well regret for the rest of their lives.

Why would they feel like bad parents? Because they had a bad idea?

It's not like they had a chance to carry it out and then you informed them of the trauma they'd likely inflicted.

Your information was timely, on point, and badly needed.

It's important that existing children feel involved in the general expectation of a new family member,

but that does not mean they should be required to be there for the birth. You spoke your truth and hopefully it was heard.

Many others defend OP’s honesty as correcting family misinformation.

headdeskreact − NTA. They made an incorrect assumption about an experience you had,

and were getting ready to make significant decisions based on that wrong assumption.

Correcting them was absolutely the right thing to do. If the rest of your family can't handle that, it's on them.

Valuable-Wallaby-167 − NTA your family has clearly been lying about how that experience was for you,

frankly mad that they've been sharing it at all. You've not ruined anything for this couple,

you've given the truth about your experience, what you may have ruined is their faith in anything your family tells them.

I wonder how annoyed your family would be about your honesty if you hadn't showed them up.

It would have been better if you had gone "actually my experience was this..." because your phrasing was a bit harsh towards the couple,

but it's really easy to pick apart someone's wording in hindsight, it's much harder to get it right in an emotional moment.

LoveBeach8 − NTA What's your other choice? Lie about it? You know darn well they were going to ask you about it sometime before the birth.

You told the truth. Sometimes, the truth hurts but it's YOUR truth and don't let anyone take that away from you, nor make you feel guilty about it.

The community validate OP’s truthful correction despite potential harsh delivery.

Bmonkey2000 − NTA. They wanted their first child to have an expirence like yours.

Clearly they were under an impression that you had a good experience.

You shined some truth on your experience. Nothing wrong with that at all.

Very mature of you that you were able to move on with your parents and hold no resentment for that mistake!!

amberstephano − NTA. Maybe you could have framed your response a bit more kindly and explained your past experience,

but at the end of the day you were making your feelings known about a terrible idea on the parents’ part!

The miracle of life is one thing, but giving birth itself is too scary, complicated, and frankly gross thing for a young child to witness live.

[Reddit User] − NTA. I recall when a friend was telling us about giving birth. The doctors wheeled in a mirror.

She said, "What the hell is that for? " They told her it was so she could see her baby being born.

She said "Get that out of here! Why would I want to see that!"

Now, if a woman doesn't want to see that, I don't see why kids would. Men have fainted watching their wives give birth!

Things have gone wrong My SIL had an emergency C-section. If they hadn't put up a curtain, I know my brother would have fainted.

My dad said if he had been in the room (it was the 50's), there would not have had a second kid.

Now, if these people want to record it (which is weird IMHO) and show it to their kid later, they can traumatize him at their leisure.

One user believes the couple’s reaction shows OP’s words held valid influence.

Major_Barnacle_2212 − NAH. You didn’t ‘ruin’ the birth. If that caused them to rethink it so severely, they probably feel there’s truth to it.

If they felt they were right your words wouldn’t matter. It would shock me if a random person’s comment was more powerful than the birth of a baby.

In the end, our Redditor’s one-liner turned a feel-good chat into a family feud. But it also sparked a vital rethink, potentially saving a little one from unwanted prime-time drama.

Do you think her warning was a heroic save, or should she have zipped it for strangers?

How would you handle spilling your own tough memories at a party? Drop your hot takes, we’re all ears!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jeffrey brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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