AITA for saying to my wife that I’m the one who gets to make decisions about my niece?

A devoted uncle who’s raised his 14-year-old niece as his own daughter since she was young just drew a hard line: no more competitive gymnastics after her devastating ACL injury. He worries about the dangers and long-term toll on her body, but his wife—who’s been a full mom figure—pushes back, wanting the girl’s input and shared decision-making.

This heartfelt debate dives into tough parenting territory—balancing a child’s passion with safety concerns, navigating guardianship versus day-to-day co-parenting, and whether a teen gets a vote in life-altering choices. The community largely sides against the unilateral ban, stressing collaboration and the niece’s voice.

AITA for saying to my wife that I’m the one who gets to make decisions about my niece?

The niece came into their lives young, amid family struggles, and they’ve raised her alongside their biological sons.

My (43M) niece (14F) is being raised by my wife (40F) and I - it’s a long story, having to do with my sister getting herself pregnant from a deadbeat...

Bottom line is, I see my niece as my daughter and love her just as much as my own biological children (11M/8M). I know my wife also loves her the...

Gymnastics started as fun but escalated with big promises.

My niece has practiced gymnastics for the past 10 years, and when she was about 7 or 8 one of the coaches at her gym took notice of her potential...

I personally believe my wife and my niece/daughter were taken by this promise of future glory (“can you imagine if she competes in the Olympics one day?”, my wife said)....

I also knew that could cost us a lot of money going forward, but the coach believed so much in her that they managed to cover some of the costs...

He supported it conditionally until the injury changed everything.

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And when I say training, I mean TRAINING some serious hard work. I told them I was fine with the idea as long my niece was happy doing gymnastics and...

And then, last month, she tore her ACL during practice. We do have insurance, so the medical costs were covered. However, she’s going through a painful recovery, all the while...

But I told my wife I don’t want her to do this anymore. Seeing her get hurt and in pain made me realize this is a dangerous sport, and the...

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The disagreement exploded over authority.

My wife said I couldn’t make this decision without considering what my niece wants; I said I can because I’m the adult here and she’s still a child.

So my wife said there was still the matter of her disagreeing with my view, and that we were supposed to make this parenting decisions together. I then said that's...

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All I meant is that I'm the sole guardian in the sense of being responsible for her; what my wife got is that I was undermining her as a surrogate...

Edit: some additional information, to be clear, I still haven't talked to my niece about this. I shared with my wife that, given the severity of her injury,

I didn't want her training anymore. This discussion was between my wife and I, it didn't involve our girl so far.

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Legal guardianship grants final authority, but in families where a partner invests daily as a parent—handling routines, emotions, and care—excluding them from big decisions erodes trust and partnership. Shared parenting thrives on collaboration, recognizing emotional roles beyond paperwork. Dismissing a wife’s input risks resentment and models poor conflict resolution for kids.

Teens around 14 develop strong identities tied to passions; elite sports like gymnastics often shape self-worth and goals. Autonomy grows here—research shows involving adolescents in health and activity choices boosts motivation and adherence, especially post-injury. Unilateral bans can spark rebellion, depression, or secrecy.

High-impact sports carry risks—ACL tears common in gymnastics due to landings and twists—but many athletes return successfully with rehab, gaining resilience and discipline. Benefits include scholarships, skills, and joy outweighing dangers for committed kids. Consult unbiased pros: physios for recovery odds, psychologists for mental toll. Ultimately, family talks with the teen center her voice, weighing facts over fear. Compromises like modified training preserve bonds while addressing safety—fostering support, not control.

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See what others had to share with OP:

Most called him out for sidelining his wife and niece, urging collaboration and professional input.

facinationstreet − YTA. Your wife should have just as much a say in decisions regarding the niece as you do. That being said, time for all 3 of you to...

(not just some coach at some gym who sees potential): professionals who can give real insight into coming back from this type of injury, professionals who can evaluate her potential,...

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Unilaterally just deciding she can't go back to a sport she loves? AH Edit due to his update: *This discussion was between my wife and I, it didn't involve our...

basicstove1336 − Yep, YTA. When your wife makes dinner do you stop her from making dinner for your niece because it is your responsibility?

When she offers to take her to practice do you stop her and tell her that you will do it since it is your sole responsibility as sole guardian?

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When she needs help with homework, or relationship advice, or female hygiene issues are you prepared to tackle all of those issues on your own as sole guardian?

If not, shut your freaking mouth and give your wife the respect she deserves for taking in your niece along with you. She deserves that much. YTA

sheramom4 − YTA. You can't expect your wife to raise this child and then not have a say in how she is raised or pull the "I get to make...

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You were dismissive of both your wife and your niece. And in the end, the most important opinion is that of your niece.

Does SHE want to recover and try to continue? Does she want to stop? She is 14, taking away something she loves because she might get or did get hurt...

Didntlikedefaultname − YTA. First sentence: my niece is being raised by my wife and I. Overall message: I am my nieces guardian and get to make all decisions on her...

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Excluding a 14 year old from their own life choices also doesn’t work. I’m sure you mean well, but these are not your decisions to make by yourself. Don’t alienate...

admiredpanda1230 − YTA. Your niece is old enough to make her own decisions about how she wants to spend her time. Your wife has been by your side helping you...

You don’t get to just unilaterally decide what your niece does or that your wife has no input just because you’re the only one who signed the papers.

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This should be a conversation between the three of you. Discuss the risks of injury, discuss the time commitment, discuss what your family WANTS.

Several stressed the niece’s voice and risks of resentment.

alv269 − YTA. Even though you are legally the guardian, you are both effectively her parents. There is no good that comes from making unilateral decisions without the other parent.

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Since she's a teenager, she should also have a say as to whether she wants to continue. She enjoys gymnastics and it is a healthy outlet for teenage energy.

If you take that away from her without giving her a choice, you're setting yourself up for a lot of problems - possible depression, hanging with the wrong people,

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having too much time on her hands to do less healthy activities, etc. No sport is without risk, but the benefits generally far outweigh them.

It could even potentially get her a college scholarship if she's that good. I highly encourage you to re-think your stance.

When gymnastics was taken from me without my choice, I fell into a depression and got into some pretty hard drugs to numb my feelings (which were not taken into...

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Nericmitch − You are absolutely YTA … first you are not taking your niece’s wants into consideration. You say as long as she’s happy and she wants to continue but...

Injuries happen to all athletes and that doesn’t stop them. If she loves it how can you take that away from her.

That makes you a bad dad since you don’t actually care what your niece wants. Second you undermine your wife who has done just as much for your niece and...

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That makes you a j__kass since you are fine having your wife help raise her but she can’t make any decisions in regards to her. That’s BS Be a better...

Spare-Article-396 − You’re expecting her to coparent but not treating her like one. YTA. Massively.

FunBodybuilder4620 − YTA. This is all about YOUR feelings. Not your niece’s. And throwing it in your wife’s face that on paper she isn’t a guardian when in practice she...

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Mistral19 − YTA. Your wife doesn’t get to be ‘mom’ only when it suits you. She’s helping raise the kid and so she gets input in all decisions. On the...

Yes it is a exceptionally hard to be one of the select few that are both in peak form and peak condition (no Injuries) at the right time in the...

Secondly, she may very well be good enough to get a college scholarship and compete at the national level. Thirdly, high level gymnasts can have great careers in theatre shows,

cirque du Soleil, performing on cruise ships, etc. Depending on her future interests, this is a possible career path. She may even want to coach or open her own gymnastics...

Of course. Gymnastics is very hard on the body. But loads of sports run the risk of injury. Skiing, running, cycling, cheerleading, football etc. It happens.

But if you take away her sport, something she enjoys and knows she has a proper shot at doing well in, she will resent you forever. You can’t wrap her...

[Reddit User] − YTA. You seem to be suffering from what i call king of the hill syndrome. Where you think you're the king of the castle and everyone is...

__sadpotato__ − INFO : you say you’re reasoning for now drawing this hard no line is because you’ve realized the sport is dangerous,

does that mean you’re making sure your boys *don’t* play football, or soccer, or baseball? You know all sports can be dangerous, even with the helmets right?

Are you really going to prevent them from doing sports/activities they love because there is a chance they *could* get hurt?

Regardless of that though I’m gonna have to go with YTA because like others have said, you can’t expect your wife to raise her and not get an equal say.

She’s either also a parent to your niece or she’s not and you need to take 100% responsibility for her. Edit // fixed a typo

KingBretwald − YTA. 1. Your wife has helped raised your niece up to now. You don't get to pull the "only I get a say" card on her now! The...

You can't pull it out now. 2. *Your niece is fourteen*! She's old enough to have a say in how she's going to live her life. You don't get to...

It's not up to you whether that injury is enough for her to quit. It's up to *her*. Lots of athletes think the game is worth injuries. Apologize to your...

For disrespecting all the work and responsibility and care and love she's given your niece all these years. If you've got financial concerns, fine.

Bring that up in a collaborative way with your *partner* in life. Maybe it's time niece tried for sponsorships or scholarships.

Work with your wife and niece's coach and her doctors to make sure she's taking the best care of herself that she can while practicing and competing.

But don't yank the rug out from under her just because you're getting cold feet. Your feet aren't the only ones affected here.

A couple offered nuanced sports insights.

jlea81 − I'm not going to make a judgement but I am a level 2 FIG gymnastics coach and a qualified sport scientist who specialises in the physical/mental health of...

Firstly, coaches telling parents that an athlete is 'special' is an incredibly common and scummy practice. There are millions of gymnasts in the world.

There are currently 1700 athletes registered with the Federation of International Gymnastics, and only about 10% of them compete at the Olympics.

It is insanely difficult to achieve this level, and even if an athlete has all the hard work and talent in the world, it doesn't mean they will achieve it.

I would recommend focusing less on the outcomes of her performance (results & medals, etc) and focusing more on her effort and personal goals like what skills she wants to...

What exactly does she want to achieve in gymnastics? If her only goal is to go to the Olympics, then I would suggest sitting her down to have an open...

Secondly, an ACL tear that requires surgery is a major injury, and she should be prepared for a long recovery and ongoing rehabilitation to avoid chronic injury.

Returning too quickly and not rehabing properly could result in the injury just getting worse or flaring up when she is older.

Not returning AT ALL to sport would actually be worse as she would likely not rebuild the strength back up and it could heal incorrectly.

A gymnastics coach is not an expert on this, and I would recommend following the guidance of her medical team or physiotherapist.

As a coach, I would also be concerned about what caused the injury. Yes, gymnastics is a high-impact sport. However, an injury in someone so young would raise concerns of...

or her strength isn't up to her current skill level. Has the coach discussed with you what her return to gym plan will be? Have they told you how they...

Lastly, you are more than in your right to be concerned about your niece and her health. However, I don't think quitting gym is the right way to go about...

especially as she wants to get back to it and will likely resent this unilateral decision you have made. She also likely will not understand that you come from a...

and may feel as though you don't think she is good enough. She may be a child, but she is 14 and has been in the sport for almost her...

Instead of making the decision yourself, I would recommend talking to her about your concerns and explaining that, while she loves the sport, you are concerned about her health in...

and discuss how she can proceed in her sport while taking care of her health (something like a strength plan or relaxation strategies etc).

Moving forward, I would say you really need to have an open discussion with your wife, your niece, and her coach. Discuss the injury (what happened and why),

your concerns around her long-term health, and what the plan is moving forward. This should include her return to the club and gradual increasing of her training,

how to reduce the risk of injury occurring in the future, and what exactly you all expect from your nieces gymnastics career. At the end of the day, yes, you...

But, if you respect and care for your niece, I would recommend approaching the topic of her return as a discussion and come up with a realistic plan that you...

I think this would help calm your anxieties around the dangers of her sport while allowing your niece to make an informed decision about her own sports career.

My only caveat would be if her coach is more concerned with her return to competitions than her physical/mental health, move clubs immediately. If you have any questions, my inbox...

[Reddit User] − YTA. If you expect to make all the decisions regarding your niece, then you shouldn't expect your wife to take on the responsibilities of caring for her...

I hope none of your wife's money goes toward your niece and you do 100% of the cooking, cleaning, chauffeuring and nurturing.

Otherwise, you're asking your wife to take on the labor of caregiving but none of the authority.

Protecting a child from harm comes from love, but overriding a passionate teen and devoted co-parent risks deep rifts. Open talks with pros could find middle ground honoring everyone’s care. Ever navigated big activity decisions with kids or co-parents? Would you let a teen resume after major injury?

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