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Woman Refuses To Move In With Fiancé Until He Fixes Daughter’s Eating Habits

by Layla Bui
November 29, 2025
in Social Issues

When it comes to relationships, differing parenting styles can create serious tension, especially when children are involved. OP, who has an 8-year-old daughter, is frustrated with her fiancé’s lack of effort in addressing his daughter’s picky eating habits.

After making a lot of progress with her own child, OP feels that her fiancé isn’t taking the necessary steps to help his daughter develop healthier eating habits, and it’s becoming a dealbreaker.

OP is also concerned that, if they combine their families, she will become the “evil stepmother” enforcing rules her fiancé isn’t willing to back up. With these growing doubts, OP is questioning whether it’s worth continuing the engagement.

Was OP right to set such a firm boundary, or is this an overreaction? Read on to find out if OP is the a**hole for delaying or possibly ending the engagement over parenting differences.

A fiancée questions marrying after seeing her partner make little effort with his daughter’s needs

Woman Refuses To Move In With Fiancé Until He Fixes Daughter’s Eating Habits
not the actual photo

'AITA for making my fiancé's daughters picky eating habits a deal breaker for us marrying?'

I will probably get a lot of flack for this so let me start with the usual comments I anticipate:

no, his daughter does not have sensory issues, is nuerodivergent,

or any other mental disorders that might affect her eating habits.

With that, I (28F) am a single mother to one kid (8F) and have been dating

and recently engaged to a man (27M) and his child (8F).

The first half of us dating, he was going through a court battle and only had every other weekend with his daughter.

We mostly planned activities as play dates and his daughter took a quick liking to me and I to her.

Our daughters are best friends and very excited to become sisters.

Once he was granted 50/50 custody, we started spending more time together

and I noticed his daughter is an extremely picky eater.

As in, favorite foods are: chicken tenders, French fries, pizza.

This was immediately sirens for me because I'm a believer in the importance of a healthy and well-balanced diet,

specially for children and had many conversations with him about it. I used my own daughter as an example.

I'm in the military and was away from her for 2 years between ages 3-5.

When I received her back at age 5.5, she had also become very picky

and I made it a priority to fix that bad habit.

It took about 6 months and I had to ease her into it

but she now readily eats just about anything and is willing to try anything.

I'm originally from a different country so we visit my country and travel regularly to explore other countries

so that is another reason having a child that is easy going with food is important to me.

All of that to say that this has been a regular conversation between my fiancé and I

and I have shared the tips that worked for me countless times. Bringing it all back to last night.

We went to eat Chinese food and ordered several plates.

His daughter tried two miniscule bites of new foods (pot stickers and tso's chicken),

made faces at both and had chicken fried rice for dinner.

She ate all her chicken and picked at the grains of rice to avoid eating any carrots or green beans.

Her dad didn't say much other than suggest she try to eat some vegetables,

to which she simply refused to and he didn't push the issue.

He told her no dessert if she didn't try to eat her vegetables and when her fortune cookie came,

he didn't stop her from eating it or taking her lollipop home.

It was frustrating to say the least to watch him not address

what she was doing and at least require her to eat some of her vegtables.

Last night it all got to me and this morning when we talked about it,

I told him that his lack of serious effort in trying to modify

and improve his daughter's eating habits are a deal breaker for me

and I would not be willing to combine our households until he made significant progress on it.

He was obviously upset about this and says I'm being unfair and not giving him enough time

but I see almost no effort in his parenting techniques/strategies since the 6 months he's had his daughter half time.

I know this might seem like such a trivial thing to break things off for

but I could write almost the exact same post about his daughter's education

(this is her second year in 2nd grade, she got held back

due to not being able to read and she's still reading on a 1st grade level)

and his lack of effort in prioritizing and making significant progress in that as well.

Once again, I also have experience in this topic.

When I received my daughter, she was also significantly behind on learning to read,

scoring so low on her state reading tests in Kindergarten and 1st that she qualified for free books programs.

I had to turn that around as well. She now reads 2 grade levels above and is a complete bookworm.

I'm genuinely starting to feel that this man is simply expecting to have me

take over all the "hard" parts of parenting and he's just waiting out

until then and it's really starting to frustrate me.

My fiancé keeps saying he'll back me up on anything I want to enforce, once we move in together.

But I see this turning into a situation where I become the evil stepmother

who suddenly changes everything, enforces new rules and his daughter quickly resents me.

I have NO ISSUES with his daughter, in fact, children are completely innocent in situations like this.

This is a complete incompatibility in parenting beliefs

and its causing me to have serious doubts and apprehension in combining our families.

So AITA for delaying or even breaking off our engagement over this?

EDIT: A lot of people are telling me I'm a wicked stepmother already,

but I haven't done or enforced anything on his daughter. I know it is not my place and I, of course,

don't want her to hate me for it when we are still establishing trust.

These are solely conversations between him and I and my inner concerns.

His daughter and I adore each other, and her mom is supportive of our growing relationship,

even offering fiance and I to have her for Thanksgiving and Christmas this year.

Family ties often demand patience, empathy and compromise. But when parenting values clash, even small issues, like a child’s eating habits, can point to deeper incompatibilities.

In this case, the original poster (OP) is deeply concerned by her fiancé’s daughter’s extreme picky eating. Her worry isn’t about a child’s preferences, it’s about long-term health, development, and whether both partners share core family values.

Research shows that picky eating is common among children. Many parents define it as a limited variety of accepted foods, rejection of new textures or appearances, or refusal to eat vegetables and other nutritious items.

Studies have linked persistent pickiness to lower intake of fruits, vegetables and whole grains, raising concerns about nutrient gaps during development.

But experts emphasize that how parents respond matters more than the child’s initial resistance. Mayo Clinic recommends serving meals together, avoiding pressure, offering small portions of new foods, and avoiding short-order cooking, meaning not preparing separate meals when a child refuses what’s served.

Positive reinforcement, repeated exposure, and modeling balanced eating habits tend to improve acceptance over time.

In this story, OP has already navigated similar issues with her own child. She helped her daughter move from limited preferences to a more varied, balanced diet by patiently guiding her, offering repeated exposure to new foods, and allowing gradual adaptation.

That transformation gives OP a strong reference point — not just for eating habits, but for how active involvement and consistency in parenting influence a child’s growth.

From a psychological perspective, parents who expect healthy habits often view a partner’s inaction as an underlying sign of disengagement.

If one parent dismisses or gives up on efforts to improve a child’s habits, whether eating or learning, the other may feel the weight of responsibility will fall solely on them. Over time, this imbalance can breed resentment or fear that the blended family will lack cohesion in values and discipline.

On the other hand, experts warn that forcing or coercing change can backfire. According to the Mayo Clinic’s child-psychology advice, children pressed to eat or repeatedly threatened with dessert or punishment often develop a negative relationship with food.

So, is OP wrong for naming her fiancé’s daughter’s picky eating as a potential deal breaker?

Given the documented challenges of picky eating and the need for a consistent, committed parenting approach to address it, I can see why OP perceives this as more than a food preference issue. It symbolizes a larger pattern, one of parenting engagement, willingness to grow, and shared values.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

This group emphasizes that the real issue isn’t just picky eating but the fiancé’s lack of involvement in parenting

PinkPencils22 − Here's the thing--it's not about the kid's picky eating or lack of effort in school.

It's about your fiancé's lack of effort in parenting.

You're right, he obviously plans to dump this all on you once you're living together.

And it's kinda understandable, you're apparently good at it.

But that's not good enough, he's her father and this is on him.

You need to know that you will be a partner in this new parenting relationship, not the only parent in charge.

This is what you need to discuss with him, don't get bogged down talking about pizza and chicken nuggets.

Now, that said, just because you were successful with your daughter doesn't mean anyone will be or can be with this girl.

You say she's not neurodivergent--my daughter wasn't diagnosed as autistic until she was 14.

And yes, she has eating issues. Even if she's not neurodivergent,

it doesn't mean it will work, nor the reading. Every kid is different.

JFC-Superstar − My dad used the “I do not have to eat anything as long as I try it once” strategy and it worked.

There is nothing I will not try, if I like it I will add that to a large list. If not I stay away but that is a small list....

RunJumpSleep − I was a picky eater as a kid. My mom just rolled with it and made sure I had food I would eat.

She never tried to force me to eat anything I didn’t want.

She just wanted me fed. As an adult, I will eat almost most foods.

Kids grow out of it but OP seems to bring the military style to her kid’s life and expects her fiancée to do the same.

These users point out that what worked for one child doesn’t always apply to another

No-Apple4951 − Ha! Good luck with that. I'm literally a dietitian

and following mealtime advice to the letter for 5 years hasn't made my son any less selective.

He ate beautifully for the 1st 2-3 years and then BAM prefers bland carbs and crudités now. No sauces, etc.

I have tried adding pressure and all that got us was stressful mealtimes.

Edit: A few people have taken issue with my comment so let me clear some things up:

- Yes, dietitians can have kids who are selective eaters, it happens.

Speech Therapists can have kids with speech difficulties. This is just life.

- Many parents are surrounded by well-meaning people giving unhelpful advice.

Lots of 'strict rule X worked for me as a kid/my kids so you should try it too'.

- Pressure can mean something as small as saying please.

Even 'no dessert til you've eaten your main meal' adds pressure.

I've sat with my kids at maybe 3000 mealtimes since they were 2.

Who can say they've never once asked their kids to 'pleeeease just try it?' even when we know better?

- food neophobia (refusal of new or unfamiliar foods) is common age 2-3.

It (usually) improves gradually over several years but can get worse before it gets better.

- My oldest son is eating quite nicely now.

He's (probably) autistic and has some sensory/texture preferences.

If left to his own devices I suspect he'd happily eat a mountain of toast.

- 'follow advice to the letter' I'm talking about picky eating advice, not 'healthy eating advice'.

It's mainly about habits to build into mealtimes that promote choice/autonomy for the kid,

varied foods offered, and reduce mealtime stress.

Jean_Marie_1989 − Just to give some perspective, I am a woman who was not diagnosed with ADHD until I was an adult.

I was extremely picky when I was a child.

My parents would ask me to at least try everything but if I did not like it, I did not have to eat it.

The thing about fruits and vegetables that often hinders children,

especially neurodivergent (including ADHD) from eating them is that they are not consistent.

Processed foods and restaurant made meat and grains are generally predictable;

they are the same almost every time you eat them.

With holding dessert from a child for not eating certain foods is only going to lead to issues

with food later on in life (like binge eating sweets in secret).

If you are able to, please talk to a professional who specializes in children and food.

You and your partner need to work together or this relationship will not last.

Just because your approach worked for your daughter does not mean it will work for another child.

This group highlights the need for collaboration between the parents

snarchetype − The kid was held back for inability to read and you’re focusing on her picking out the carrots?

I think the diet is not the most important thing here.

Most kids naturally get less picky over time and it isn’t necessarily a super urgent thing to correct

as long as she is eating enough and doesn’t have scurvy or some other vitamin deficiency.

StellaV-R − Assuming she is with her mom part-time, it’s almost impossible to have 2-homes-2-rules without damage to her.

It sounds like you have your daughter full time so it’s infinitely easier to mould her behaviour.

But this isn’t about food or the little girl. You and your intended aren’t on the same page,

and haven’t learned to communicate & collaborate to blend your families.

You should address that before you go any further

Independent_Honey150 − I’m not sure how to phrase this without sounding harsh,

but what makes you qualified to say she is not neurodivergent, etc.?

Maria_Dragon − You two aren't compatible. If you are going to combine households, you need a unified front on parenting.

thisisstupid- − The quickest way to create issues around food is to make food an issue.

I didn’t run my kitchen like a short order cook, what I made was what was for dinner,

but if you tried a bite and didn’t like it there was always free foods available, fruits, vegetables,

Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, that they could make themselves.

My son who used to be extremely picky naturally became less so as he grew up.

And it certainly didn’t hurt him to eat more apples and cottage cheese since those were his “safe foods”. YTA.

Adept_Individual_565 − My opinion is your mentality is a parent of a single child. I have four children.

Except for biology and their looks they have very little in common.

Didn't like to watch the same thing, eat the same thing, do the same thing,

didn't learn the same way (one child had a photographic memory and didn't hold the other three to that standard), etc.

So, what worked for your daughter will most likely not work for his.

For consistency of the the child, her parents need to figure out similar routines and eating habits.

This way she isn't stressed. I believe she is, non-verbally, telling y'all how stress she is.

Your fiance is not the only one who went through a court battle, she also did.

The fighting between the parents, probably name calling, stabbing one in the back, etc.

She may be feeling like she has no control and controlling what little of her world she can with everything you are describing.

If he becomes as assertive (lack of a better word) as you believe he should be and her mother isn't on board,

your fiance's daughter will be resenting him. Finally, you joined the military, not him.

I live in a huge military area and hear about a lot of spouses getting divorced

because the military spouse wants everything at home life to be as structured as their work life

and the non military spouse can't handle it. They feel like they have a drill sargent instead of a spouse.

This commenter stressed the importance of flexibility and compromise in parenting

TwiLuv − No, I think he’s better off, if you let him go.

You’re being far too rigid, especially in a situation where he has to co-parent with his Ex.

If the child’s other parent does not model the same behavior at the table, or even fights against it,

he can only suggest, but can ruin his relationship with his child by punishing/restricting their food choices.

This is also one of the ways Food Disorders like Anorexia develop.

What worked for you & your child is NOT necessarily what will work for him& his child.

If you are unable to bend, to compromise- he really is better off out of the relationship. Sorry, but true.

When it comes to blended families, it’s crucial to establish a unified front in parenting. OP’s decision to pause her engagement isn’t just about her fiancé’s daughter’s eating habits, it’s about the larger parenting incompatibility that’s surfacing.

But do you think OP was right to call off the wedding over this, or was she being too rigid? How would you handle a situation like this? Let us know your thoughts below!

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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