AITA for telling my dad to F off and cry to someone else because he doesn’t get to blame me for his wife giving birth to a stillborn baby?

The phone call was a gut punch—an 18-year-old woman, already estranged from her father, faced his tearful rage blaming her for his wife’s stillborn baby. His wife, pregnant and alone, had begged her to be a birthing partner, but she refused, citing years of resentment. Now, his accusations—that she could have “saved” the baby—ignited her fury, leading to a heated exchange where she told him to “f**k off and cry to someone else.”

This isn’t just a family spat; it’s a raw collision of grief, guilt, and fractured bonds. Her defiance stems from a decade of her father’s manipulative tactics and his wife’s taunts, leaving her and her siblings wary of his home. Readers may feel her anger, questioning whether her outburst was justified or if grief muddies the moral line.

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‘AITA for telling my dad to f off and cry to someone else because he doesn’t get to blame me for his wife giving birth to a stillborn baby?’

My parents got divorced when I (18f) was 7 and my siblings were 4 and 3. Dad started dating his wife a few months after he moved out of the house we'd shared. He'd dated others before his wife. We met them all unfortunately and even worse is she was the worst one of all but he ended up marrying her.

My dad wanted us to feel like his house was the home we had and mom's was the place we had to be. Him and his wife would taunt my mom that we had two moms now and dad's wife would be the one we liked most and wanted to spend time with.

Mom had stuff like that printed out in a file and when I stopped going to dad's house two years ago she let me go through it. By then I already heard stuff from dad and his wife so it didn't come as some big shock. By that point the tensions were higher. My dad and his wife had no kids together and their plan for me and my siblings to like the wife better failed.

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Actually none of us like her. My siblings can't stand her. My sister more so because she's the youngest and my dad's wife really tried to turn her into a mini-her. My brother was the only boy so got that attention and being so young when dad and mom divorced there was more hope that he'd play along.

They tried with me too but I was old enough to remember life without dad's wife so I think they always saw me as a long shot. My siblings spend significantly less time at dad's now. They went from 50-50 to every other weekend and only because the judge ordered them to go.

My dad and his wife tried to get full custody and accused my mom of parental alienation but her file showed that was not true and it was the other way around if anything, even if it failed. After all that my dad and his wife started trying for a baby. She had two miscarriages and then her third pregnancy stuck.

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My dad was away, not sure where, when she ended up going into labor and she called mom, my siblings and me to try and get me to be her birthing partner. She wanted me to take her to the hospital as well. But I refused. She begged and said dad couldn't get in touch with dad and she was scared and needed someone and I told her to find someone who cared.

We found out a couple of days later the baby had been stillborn and I guess early, though I'm not sure how early. My dad wanted to see us but none of us wanted to see him. He tried to insist my siblings be there but they refused to go outside of the weekends that had to be. He tried to speak to me but I ignored him.

Then he made my siblings put me on the phone and he blamed me for what happened to the baby. He said he heard I refused to help his wife and he was a big mess crying and yelling at me for not saving the baby and helping his wife. I repeatedly told him to f**k off and cry to someone else and he doesn't get to blame me for his wife having a stillborn baby.

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When he finally realized what I was saying he asked me how I could take that attitude when I lost a sibling. When he is still my dad and he was a damn good dad. I told him he wasn't and he kept proving that. My mom's trying to work with her lawyer to see if all this will change the custody order for my siblings but we're not sure yet.

My siblings really don't want to go to dad's house but if mom lets that happen then she'll lose custody and they'll end up in dad's care full time. Which none of us want. Which this isn't really relevant so I'll stop rambling now.. AITA?

Blaming an 18-year-old for a stillbirth is not just unfair—it’s emotionally abusive. The father’s absence during his wife’s labor and his wife’s desperate call to a resentful stepdaughter reflect poor planning and strained family ties. The OP’s refusal to help, rooted in years of her stepmother’s manipulative behavior, was her asserting a boundary, not causing a tragedy. Her father’s accusations shift his guilt onto her, a classic deflection tactic.

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Stillbirth affects 1 in 160 pregnancies, often unpredictably, and no bystander can “save” a baby in such cases (CDC). Dr. John Gottman, a relationship expert, notes, “Blaming others during grief often masks personal regret, fracturing trust” (Gottman Institute). The father’s history of trying to alienate the children from their mother compounds the dysfunction.

The OP should maintain no contact, focusing on her and her siblings’ well-being. Therapy can help process the trauma of this blame and past conflicts. Supporting her mother’s legal efforts to adjust custody, as she mentioned, is wise, with documentation of this incident as evidence. A family counselor could guide future steps, ensuring the siblings’ safety from an unstable environment.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

The Reddit crew roared in like a protective pack, shredding the father’s logic and rallying behind the OP’s stand. It was a fiery mix of outrage and empathy, with users dissecting the absurdity of the blame. Here’s their raw take:

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The_Boss16 − If your dad really cared he would had a plan for the birth if he needed to travel. And, it is so weird, you ask someone that you do not get along with to take you to the hospital. She doesn't have family, friends, colleagues? Why you? And the blame on you because she had a stillborn is ridiculous.. NTA

Ancient-Highlight112 − Why didn't your your dad's wife just call an ambulance?

Plane-Pain-6678 − If step-monster was in distress and needed to get to the hospital, did she not have people on her side of the family to help? And what about, oh, I don’t know, Uber?!?! It was do or die with an 18yo kid and therefore all your fault? She and your dad need psychiatric help. NTA.

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clownandmuppet − Why is your dad away anywhere when his wife was so close to labour? He made that decision to be away at a critical juncture. Perhaps he should reflect on what he could have done differently that day.. You are NTA

Economy-Cod310 − NTA. I wonder why Dad couldn't be reached? What or who was he doing while his wife was having a miscarriage? I'd be curious. I get the feeling that Dear Old Dad is a cheater.

Sweet_Vanilla46 − Soooo dad was gone and not answering his phone…. Gee, I wonder what the guy, who managed to date multiple women (long enough to consider them relationships to introduce his kids to) all within a few months of moving out, could possibly have been doing that kept him so distracted that he didn’t answer multiple calls from his pregnant wife.

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I wonder what could possibly be causing him so much guilt that his fallback is blaming his underage daughter who is well known to actively disliking his wife for not being there during complications while he was completely unreachable.

NTA and I think we all know how dear old dad was spending his time, because no man I know leaves their pregnant spouse at home to go out of town and ignores several phone calls from that spouse…

Skyeblue0922 − I am so sorry that you and your siblings are going through this. Keep helping your mum having the custody agreement changed. I would suggest that you tell your lawyer that your ‘dad’ and his mrs are unstable and they are not fit to look after your siblings.

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I would actually go as far as to say that you think it’s dangerous to put your siblings in a move where she has lost a baby and will probably fix on your siblings to accommodate for the loss of the kid. Karma is a b-word and that what happened to your dad and his Mrs are the consequences of their actions. . NTA

dimensionsanalyst − I would be seeing red if I was OP mom, whom in their right mind ask a 18/19 yo to do something so complicated as being their birthing partner?! Does this woman doesn’t have a family?

Even so, she could have gone alone instead of asking a teenager and then blaming her for their own lack of intelligence. The dad doesn’t want to feel guilty, so he is asigning the guilt to someone else. At the end it was his responsibility as a father leave everything coordinated.

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fiestafan73 − Is he under the delusion that you are an OB/GYN and could have saved her pregnancy? What an idiotic assertion. As for getting her to the hospital, if anyone is to blame for that, it is the two irresponsible fools who never made any kind of birthing plan. NTA.

Ancient-Meal-5465 − He blamed you for the death of a baby where he knew your younger siblings could hear.  He’s an abuser. 

Redditors slammed the father as manipulative, questioning his absence and his wife’s bizarre request. Their support validates the OP’s anger, but does it offer a path forward, or just fuel her pain?

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The OP’s fiery retort to her father’s cruel blame was a stand for her dignity amid a tangled web of grief and dysfunction. Her family’s fractured past and her siblings’ resistance to their father’s home underscore the stakes of this moment. Walking away may be her only peace. Have you ever faced unfair blame in a family crisis? How would you handle a parent’s misplaced guilt? Share your thoughts below.

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