AITA for telling my son he can’t live with his dad?

A 13-year-old kid suddenly wants to bolt from his mom’s house – complete with his own room, top-notch school district, and rock-solid stability – to chase after his gaming buddy dad, who’s drowning in 50k child support debt and bounces between dead-end gigs. That’s the nightmare unfolding for a single mom who’s solo-parented him since infancy, even after slapping a restraining order on her ex for his nasty treatment.

This yarn peels back the cracks in father-son ties, where the shiny allure of a “fun dad” masks a chaotic reality, forcing the mom to juggle shielding her boy with the dread of seeming like a control freak. Was the flat-out no a misstep, or the only way to steer a teen clear of bad calls? Let’s unpack the mess to get the full scoop on this emotional tangle.

‘AITA for telling my son he can’t live with his dad?’

Things heated up from recent chats between the boy and his dad, when R dropped the bombshell wish for a major life shake-up:

My son (13), I will call him R, recently started asking to live with his dad. I currently have full custody and his father, I will call him A, is...

I (30f) have a steady job, a house where he has his own room, live within a great school district, and provided solely for him his entire life. A and...

He denied he was his son and wanted a DNA test. Spoiler, R was his. A was deplorable towards me and blamed me for all the terrible things in his...

I knew R deserved a relationship with A despite how he treated me. I knew he wouldn't hurt him or mistreat him. Unfortunately it was open season for me so...

I never once said a terrible thing about A and wouldn't let anyone around us say anything if R was around. I let them spend time together and build a...

Recently R has gotten into gaming and he plays with A and I think that's where this all started. Also, my husband and I recently had a baby.

Even trying to stay cool, the mom had to tackle her son’s tough ask head-on, her response rooted in raw worries about his future:

Now back to A. He doesn't have a steady job, lives with his mom, recently got a DUI and possession, lives in a not so good school district, and has...

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So, R asked me if he could live with his dad. I was upset but took some time before I responded because I didn't want to let my emotions make...

I didn't go into too many details, I'm not sure how much I should tell him at 14, and I didn't want him to get more upset with me. He's...

ETA: He is in therapy, but he hates it. It seems to be starting to help him some. I did bring up some concerns about his dad negatively talking about...

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Not sure how true it was since I was in the room. He is starting to see all the good things we do for him and is starting to be...

I have in the past brought up that his dad doesn't live in the best part of town and we have agreed to have him go over more. All he...

Problem is neither have asked, I bring it up to illicit a response and get a maybe from him and a definite from the family member. Problem is that's getting...

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He has started to go over a little more for more extended periods of time over school breaks but said he wouldn't do school work if he was there. So...

OP’s saga centers on a teen hooked on his “cool dad” vibe from online games, blind to the guy’s financial wreck and legal baggage, leaving the full-custody mom to slam the door on the idea. She’s torn about spilling too many ugly details, scared it’ll scar him, but that silence risks painting her as the roadblock. Some counter-takes say she should “test” the dad by letting the kid ask himself – maybe a natural letdown – but the safety red flags make that a gamble not worth taking.

Society loves pushing dad bonds, even with crappy parents, but here the gap between setups screams for stability first. The ex isn’t just dodging support; he’s got a rap sheet (DUI, possession) and a nomadic life – stuff that could tank R’s schooling and mental health. OP routing pickups through a relative highlights the ex’s deliberate isolation, cranking up the relational knots.

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Family therapist Dr. Laura Markham, behind “Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids,” hit the nail on the head in a 2023 Aha! Parenting piece: “Teens test edges, but parents must blend honesty with safeguards. Laying out reasons plainly, minus the bashing, makes kids feel heard and cuts rebellion odds.” Spot-on advice: OP ought to level with her son on specifics, like ditching his room or extracurriculars, so he dots his own i’s.

Practical fixes kick off with an open chat: “I get the gaming pull with Dad sounds fun, but crashing there means dropping stuff you’re used to, like school and activities. How about ramping up visits over breaks to test the waters?” Loop in family therapy for a neutral zone where R vents without judgment.

If the ex keeps trash-talking, log it for legal ammo – but skip turning the kid into a pawn. Ultimately, it’s OP’s chance to lock in as the steady guide, schooling R on weighing picks over chasing fantasies. As for coming off too rigid, nah – but cracking open builds lasting trust. Sharing sans demonizing the dad lets her boy spot truths without feeling sold out.

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Here’s what people had to say to OP:

The online crowd lit up with takes, blending straight talk, personal gut-punches, and a dash of wit – everyone itching to weigh in on this mom’s tangle.

A bunch of folks backed the mom hard, saying she’s spot-on shielding her kid from the shaky setup, but nudged her to loosen up a bit to dodge building grudges:

PotentialityKnocks − NTA. This might be the time to be more open with him though, and explain your reasons. Just a blanket shut down is going to lead to resentment...

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azh88 − NTA but seriously he’s old enough to know the truth about his dad. Obviously you don’t need to trash him but tell him exactly how it is, so...

Twasbrillig1 − NTA But you have to tell him the truth. He's 13, he deserves to know and to be honest, so do you. You don't have to take being...

Others dished out gentle pushback, warning silence could shove the boy further away, and suggested letting him poke the bear with Dad himself:

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Familydrama99 − Has R actually asked his dad about this? I mean it sounds like there isn't even a bedroom for him at Grandma's house. And it's not like this...

... "I hear that this is something you really want, how about you chat to your dad about. " He may get rejected but it would show him more about...

A 14 year old deserves a much, much more considered answer from his parent than "no it can't happen and I'm not gonna discuss why". Which is what this I...

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[Reddit User] − NAH. One thing that’s suspicious is that he’s got the idea but no reasoning behind it, I think his dad may be potentially influencing him.

Humor popped up too, channeling that teen haze to poke fun while hitting home on the "greener grass" trap:

[Reddit User] − NAH. This is a tough situation, speaking as someone who was once the kid in this exact situation. The problem here is that he won't listen no...

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Dad is the cool one who plays video games with him. On top of this, the idea of life with Dad is novel and exciting - and he's probably been...

This kid has no concept of the fact that if he lived with Dad, Dad would have to be the mean parent who makes him do chores (or that if...

He just thinks if he goes to live with Dad, he'll get to sit and play video games with him all day and everything will be great. That's as far...

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Deeper dives stressed therapy and straight talk, flagging that hiding stuff just feeds the fire over time:

gapeach2333 − NAH. Maybe a therapy session could be beneficial. It sounds like your son is unhappy or unfulfilled in some way that he thinks his dad could fix. A...

Cent1234 − This isn't an AITA thing, this is a 'you're doing the right thing, but going about it wrong' thing. You need to go into the details with him;...

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He's 13, he's old enough for the truth. It will hurt him, but he'll at least (eventually) understand that you're still trying to protect him. Be honest, be as impartial...

I let them spend time together and build a relationship. This is the problem. If A is deplorable, made your life hell, and you needed to get a restraining order,...

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SpinachSpinosaurus − I told him simply that unfortunately that couldn't happen. I didn't go into too many details, I'm not sure how much I should tell him at 14 When...

She went on lenghts and more why she couldn't do that and it got to a point where I, at the time when Internet just started to become a regular...

I might have been 14 and getting manipulated left and right by other family members if they had issues in things she took on, but we have been always very...

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If you keep info, important info, from him, your ex is going to fill these gaps with false info. Heck, I would have had explain it to him earlier, in...

-phantomflower- − NAH all the reasons you stated for him to not live their are pretty valid. I think you should explain the situation a bit more delicately because he...

Lucy_Nell − NAH. But your son is 14, you can give him all the details. He meeds them to understand your point of view. Maybe he will be angry or...

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JudgingBitch − You gave birth to him at 17, but you think he’s too innocent to know his father’s flaws at 14? Now back to A. He doesn't have a...

If he were to live there, he wouldn't have his own room, and wouldn't be able to do some of the extra curricular activities he does when he is with...

Also, the conflict you mentioned is between you and your son. So all the N t A voters are calling your son an a**hole. Really?

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All in all, this tale boils down to a mom threading the needle between guarding her son from his dad’s real-world pitfalls and letting him chase that father-son spark – no side’s all right or wrong in the mix. Though the crowd leans toward urging her to get real with him, it’s clear the steady life she’s crafted is irreplaceable bedrock.

What about you – if you were in her shoes, how would you handle your kid’s plea? Drop your own stories or tips in the comments; let’s hash it out for the smartest path forward!

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