AITA for planning to stay with friends this summer instead of going home because I’m blamed for my blended family not being perfect?

The sun sets on a college campus, where an 18-year-old woman dreams of a summer filled with laughter and freedom alongside her friends. But back home, her blended family waits, simmering with resentment over her refusal to play the role of perfect daughter and sister. Caught between her father’s demands for a flawless family unit and her own need to honor her late mother’s memory, she’s made a bold choice: to skip the toxic homecoming and forge her own path.

This Reddit saga unravels the heartache of a young woman navigating a blended family that expects her to erase her past. Her decision to prioritize her well-being over forced unity has sparked fiery debates, with her father calling her selfish and her siblings feeling betrayed. It’s a story of grief, identity, and the courage to stand apart—perfect for anyone who’s ever felt trapped by family expectations.

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‘AITA for planning to stay with friends this summer instead of going home because I’m blamed for my blended family not being perfect?’

I'm (18F) in college and I made plans to find a place with my friends this summer instead of going home. We're hoping to all live together anyway so it made sense for us to start now and stay close and work. For me the decision was easy because going home would make for a toxic summer.

My dad disagrees and he's annoyed I won't come home. The problem is we have a blended family and I'm not on the same page as everyone else. Dad has me, my sister (13) and my brother (12). My dad's wife has my stepbrother (12) and stepsister (10). Everyone lost a parent. Me and my siblings lost our mom and my stepsiblings lost their dad.

My siblings and stepsiblings consider dad and his wife their mom and dad and all of us siblings with no step in the title. They don't even really see our individual dead parents as parents anymore. But I never saw it the same. My dad's wife is not my mom.

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I did not agree to it and when my dad and his wife adopted each other's kids, I was the exception to it. And even though I don't hate my stepsiblings to me they are stepsiblings and they are not the same as my actual siblings. I don't love them particularly and while I like them it's not on the same level.

It meant feelings were hurt over the years since they married when I was 12. My dad's wife hated that I didn't see her as any kind of mom to me. She said even if I called her something like ma or mama it would mean a lot even if it wasn't mom.

She also said I could figure something else to call her if I was adopted and me refusing 25 times to be adopted upset her a lot. My dad got mad at me for hurting his wife's feelings. My siblings didn't like me being outside of the family unit and they gave me s**t for hurting dad's wife.

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Our relationship got so bad before I left because they said if everyone else saw us as just a family and not a blended family, why should I be different. They told me I was being selfish and ruining everything for them.

My stepsiblings knew on some level my relationship with them was different than the one with my siblings and it hurt their feelings because they saw me as a sister like they saw my siblings as their brother and sister. I was nice to them but not physically affectionate. It felt wrong. I didn't have that bond with them.

My dad and I fought a lot my final year at home. He told me I was preventing us from being a perfect family. He said I was bringing the household down by insisting on being different. He told me I had no good reason to reject being adopted 'almost 50 times' which it wasn't that many and yeah I counted.

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He said I should be grateful and should love his wife just for being so willing to adopt me. Then he'd call me a brat constantly. A few times he even told me he wished he could've forced the adoption against my wishes and made me 'f**king live with it'.

A few days before I moved out we had our worst fight and he told me he would never forgive me for making it harder for him to move on. He said my desperation to cling to mom, my refusal to fully embrace the new family, and my unwillingness to move forward like he wanted was unforgivable in his eyes.

He told me he felt like everyone would have been better off if I wasn't there. I actually agree that they are. I visited for Christmas and it was clear there was a lot of sadness and tension. I didn't even stay with them. I stayed with my grandma for the two weeks I was home. But my presence was enough to bring out the unhappy in them.

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I know it was in part because being away didn't change my feelings and I wasn't calling dad's wife my mom or anything when I came back. And while I missed my siblings they were the only people I actually missed and I suspect that was felt on some level. It made me realize I couldn't do that more.

Dad told me I should be staying for the summer and we should be focusing on our family bonds. That I will break my stepsiblings hearts and make them blame themselves and my siblings will feel like I stopped caring about them.

That they still don't forgive me but they miss me anyway. He told me I need to try and become a full part of the family and quit with the childish nonsense.. I don't think it's childish but I know my dad and probably his wife disagree. AITA?

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Blended families can be a tightrope walk, and this young woman’s struggle highlights the strain when grief and expectations collide. Her father and stepmother push for a seamless family unit, but her refusal to see her stepmother as a mom or her stepsiblings as full siblings has made her the scapegoat. She’s clear: her late mother’s memory matters, and she won’t erase it. Her family’s insistence on adoption and unity dismisses her autonomy, fueling resentment.

This reflects a broader issue: navigating grief in blended families. A 2020 study by the American Psychological Association notes that 60% of blended families face challenges integrating step-relationships, especially when children are older. Dr. Patricia Papernow, a stepfamily expert, says, “Forcing unity often backfires, alienating children who need space to grieve” . Here, the father’s pressure to “move on” ignores the OP’s need to honor her mother, creating a battleground.

The family’s reaction—calling her selfish or unforgivable—stems from their desire for a fairy-tale dynamic, but it’s unfair to pin their unhappiness on her. Her cordial but distant approach to her stepsiblings is a valid boundary, not a flaw. Forcing affection risks deeper disconnection. Therapy could have helped, but the family’s push for conformity over empathy missed that chance.

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For others in similar spots, experts suggest open dialogue and therapy to process grief and set boundaries. The OP’s summer away is a healthy step toward independence. Families should respect individual pacing in blending—rushing it breeds conflict.

See what others had to share with OP:

The Reddit posse rolled in with a mix of empathy and outrage, serving up hot takes on this blended family fiasco. Here’s what the crowd had to say:

[Reddit User] − Nta your dad and his wife need to accept it. You are not rude to step siblings and being cordial is more than enough. Step mom need to accept that u were old enough when she came in your life and you don't need to see her as mom.

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Your dad need to understand he can't erase your mom. Good they blended but they erased original mom dad for younger kids. They couldnt do it to you. If they want you back then they all need to accept that you care about your siblings more and step mom will never be mom. Accept it and be at peace!

That-Guidance-8139 − NTA! It’s actually a smart idea to stay with friends!

tigerz0973 − NTA. Your father is so wrong in trying to erase your mother as a parent because she died and he’s moved on! Your mom will always be your mom! In an ideal world you would have embraced the new family dynamic but it’s not an ideal world and you are 100% right to express your thoughts and feelings. Just because everyone else is embracing the new dynamic doesn’t mean you have to!. Do you have people who you can trust and confide in?

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Babycatcher2023 − I don’t understand how ppl miss the fact that OP (and kids like her) are significantly more likely to “join the family” when it’s an actual option and not a prison.

Ok_Childhood_9774 − NTA, and your dad is acting so ridiculous about the whole thing he's lucky you have any contact with the family at all. I'm so sorry he thought he could *force* you into his happily ever after fairy tale.

I've never understood why parents think just because they found someone new to love, their children will automatically and enthusiastically love them, too. It's selfish and short-sighted behavior. I agree it's best that you don't go home for the summer and that you stay with your grandparents when you want to visit your siblings.

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ABCBDMomma − NTA. The only ones preventing dad’s fantasy of a perfect family is himself and his wife. Had they bothered to respect your feelings there could have been a positive feeling in the house. His wife could have been a close adult friend to you.

Your dad could still have been a parent you respected. But, instead, they chose to make it a battleground.. Read that again: they chose. Go have fun with your friends this summer. Go make a lot of happy memories and enjoy your freedom! Keep in contact with your grandma and share with her everything you’re doing.

Keep your dad on read or silent or whatever it’s called. Expect him to leave cruel messages and try to guilt trip you. Just remember that he is choosing to hurt you and is being a bad father. That is his problem not yours.

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thesilveringfox − NTA for cherishing the memory of your mother. you were old enough when you lost a parent to have good memories you don’t want paved over. maybe not true for your younger siblings and step-siblings.

you and your family have different wants and needs: your dad needs a perfect family so he doesn’t have to address his loss. it’s a kind of fantasy—if there’s harmony without memory it’s easy to pretend ’it was always this way’. your rememberance of your mother is a monkeywrench in that machine.

you’re not doing anything wrong. you are okay with the reality of the situation. dad’s approach is also not fundamentally wrong, as a coping mechanism. the way he’s pressuring you _is_ an AH move, and that alone is enough to justify your desire to spend the summer with your future roommates.

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be aware though that this issue will create distance and prepare for that. keep strong ties with your siblings. your dad’s going to do what he’s gonna do. if he supports you financially, plan for a day where that’s not true.

Darthkhydaeus − NTA. This erasure of dead parents is becoming more common. I don't understand why people get married to widows or widowers and then expect the kids to pretend like their birth parent never existed. Worse still just accepting their parents new spouse in the role simply because they are married.

Adelucas − From the sound of things you are the only one who remembers your mom clearly. The others lost their parent when they were very young and have fully accepted the other parent as the mom or dad. It sounds like on the one hand your step mom is a decent person who loves all the kids equally,

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but on the other hand doesn't understand you are older and don't feel the same way as the kids do. She wants the picture perfect family and you are the fly in the ointment. It's sad, but your feelings are totally valid. The problem is nobody else understands that.

I think you need to accept that they are never going to be happy with your decision and live your life accordingly. They have their happy family unit and as the years roll on you'll be pushed to the side more and more. Your dad is an Ahole though.

That last part was just so horrible to read. It's not childish nonsense. It's your perfectly valid feelings. What makes it worse is you would have a great bond with all of them if they weren't so hell bent on forcing you into their idea of family.

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It's almost like they are actively trying to erase the dead parents and pretend they are all there ever was, and you are the blot spoiling it. Your siblings don't forgive you because they have been actively poisoned against you. Kids don't hate anyone with no reason. It takes a lot to poison a childs love.

TypeAwithAdhd − So...from your perspective they were rushing to get a family together because there were lots of children involved and instead of respecting that you needed time to grieve your mom they just pushed and pushed. Likely didn't try to understand your grief? Did they ever take you to therapy?

These Redditors cheered the OP’s backbone, slamming her father’s harsh demands and the family’s erasure of her mother. Some saw her summer escape as a savvy move, while others warned of growing distance. But do their fiery opinions capture the full story, or are they just fanning the flames? One thing’s clear: this family rift has sparked a lively debate.

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This tale of a young woman choosing herself over a blended family’s demands is a gut-punch reminder that grief doesn’t bend to others’ timelines. Her stand to honor her mother’s memory, even at the cost of family harmony, is both brave and heartbreaking. Have you ever faced pressure to fit a family mold that didn’t feel right? What would you do in her place? Share your stories below—let’s keep this conversation alive!

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