AITA for asking for a gift receipt for a baby shower gift?

What would you do if someone handed you a baby gift that accidentally poked at one of your biggest pet peeves? Most people would smile, say thank you, and quietly figure out what to do later. But when school rivalries run deep in a family, even a simple onesie can turn into a public moment of tension.

This situation blew up after a baby shower when a seemingly innocent gift sparked an immediate reaction, followed by a trash can decision that traveled fast through the grapevine. Now the mom-to-be wonders if her honest response made her the bad guy.

‘AITA for asking for a gift receipt for a baby shower gift?’

The story starts with the joyful chaos of a baby shower for the couple’s first child.

My(28F) husband (30M) and I are having our first son later this year and he is due on labor day. I had my baby shower last weekend and it was...

Things quickly became awkward during the gift-opening portion.

My husband showed up for the gift portion. When opening gifts, one gift was a baby care package and a onesie to the rival college my husband and I went...

My Husband has a pretty deep h__red of the rival school. I follow along with that since fall saturdays at football games is our thing.

When we opened this gift, my husband audibly said "oh". I could see the "what the f__k " look on his face. I said, I hope a gift receipt came...

I was like, oh well, "Sons Name" is never going to wear this. Then moved on to the next gift. Little awkward, but whatever. After the party, my husband threw...

The real fallout happened days later when the story spread.

A few days ago someone asked what happened with the onesie and I told them. Well that made it around to a few people and I get a text from...

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I was like thats what the gift receipt comment was for and told her my husband would never allow our son to be dressed like that. I never thought it...

The core conflict here centers on a mismatched baby shower gift that hit a sensitive personal nerve: a college rivalry both parents take seriously. What began as a lighthearted moment escalated quickly because of an on-the-spot reaction in public, followed by disposal of the item and later sharing the story openly. At its heart, the disagreement mixes gratitude, social etiquette, and the emotional weight people place on symbolic gestures when a new baby is involved.

The expecting mom acted on instinct to protect the shared family identity she and her husband built around their alma mater. She assumed the onesie was a joke and responded accordingly. Her husband’s visible disappointment amplified the moment. On the other side, the gift-giver likely intended a playful nod to their own school pride, but felt publicly rejected and disrespected when the item was dismissed and trashed. Communication broke down because neither side paused to consider the other’s perspective—intent versus impact.

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Family therapist Dr. Laura Markham explains that “small moments of rejection in front of others can feel surprisingly painful, especially when they involve generosity.” This applies directly: the public nature of the reaction turned a private preference into a visible slight, while the giver’s hurt grew when they learned the onesie was discarded instead of quietly repurposed.

The healthiest path forward involves private, calm conversations. The mom could reach out with a simple, sincere apology for how the moment came across, acknowledging the kindness behind the gift. Moving forward, both the couple and their friend might agree to laugh about school rivalries in the future, while setting gentle boundaries around gifts that carry strong personal symbolism. Small gestures like that rebuild trust without anyone having to compromise their values.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Reactions on social media came in heavily one-sided, with the vast majority calling out the couple for immaturity and poor etiquette. Almost everyone agreed the public handling and eventual trash decision crossed a line.

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Many readers strongly sided against the original poster and her husband. They focused on the lack of basic gratitude and unnecessary public awkwardness:

StAlvis − ESH My Husband has a pretty deep h__red of the rival school. You two are about to raise a child. Grow up.

nolamom0811 − YTA. You could have donated that to Goodwill or a shelter instead of throwing it in the trash.

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My aunt (technically my cousin but age gap so she was “aunt”)worked for a battered woman’s shelter,

and I can promise you that almost any woman (or man) fleeing an abusive relationship with a baby would be eternally grateful for a brand new onesie, no matter what...

ElectricityBiscuit86 − YTA. Asking about a gift receipt in front of everyone as you're opening the gift? That's just tacky. And I know little children better able to hide their...

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Plus, you threw it out instead of donating which is wasteful. Sounds like your friend was making a playful-ribbing joke and you guys took it to a weird, awkward place.

areyukittenm3 − YTA for being rude and tacky. You and your husband sound really immature. You could’ve just regifted or donated.

supremegoldie − YTA for throwing the onesie away when we get gifts we say thanks despite however we feel about it asking for a gift receipt in public was tacky...

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Others echoed the same criticism, emphasizing wastefulness and the childishness of holding onto college grudges:

Superb_Kitchen9128 − Okay…. please grow tf up!

Own-Heart-7217 − YTA Well your husband is and rude. It was a gift. By this point in your life you should not know to be gracious.

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You do not deserve a gift simply because you chose to have a baby. It was given to you out of kindness. One more thing, I hope your son goes...

trythisoutchiki − YTA and you're f__king weird with how you handled the situation. You could have donated it, or used it when the kid is having major blowouts. But instead...

ssk7882 − Soooo, your friend gave you a onesie from their alma mater as a baby shower gift, and you first asked about a receipt and then bragged publicly about...

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Yes, of course YTA! You also don't sound mature enough to be raising a child. You're an adult now. Time to put away juvenile nonsense like school rivalries.

Mister_Silk − YTA and know nothing about gratitude or etiquette. A person gave you gift you don't love. It happens. Smile warmly and say thank you.

And then to throw the gift into the trash and tell people you threw it away on top of that? It was a perfectly serviceable piece of infant clothing that...

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A few comments added sharp humor or extra emphasis on the waste and entitlement angle:

Regular_Rooster_439 − YTA You received a gift you didn't like ? Smile, say thank you and donate it later or throw it away. There was no need to embarrass your...

Spare-Article-396 − YTA. You could have just donated it. I mean, throwing it in the trash is pretty gross and wasteful. Telling people you threw it in the trash is...

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jamesandlily_forever − Getting angry over a school is something...

NaiveIndication3894 − YTA. You and your husband are huge AH’s. Learn some gratitude and manners. And you could’ve donated it or returned it. Wow.

K3Elisa − The fact that that you tossed it in the trash and then told people makes you the AH. Perhaps an odd choice of gift but your response was...

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This situation shows how quickly small preferences can spiral into hurt feelings when they’re aired publicly. A gift given in good faith deserves at least surface-level grace, even if it doesn’t match the recipient’s taste. Tossing it dramatically and then sharing the story only deepened the sting for the giver.

It also highlights that college rivalries can feel huge in the moment but look surprisingly petty when a new life is about to enter the picture. Simple manners—quiet thanks, private disposal, discreet donation—often preserve relationships better than raw honesty in front of a crowd. Would you have quietly thanked the giver and donated the onesie later, or do you think the couple was right to make their stance clear right away? How much should past school loyalties matter once you’re raising a child?

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