AITA for treating my BF too harshly during the birth of our son?

Giving birth is one of the most intense and vulnerable experiences a person can go through — especially with your first child and serious medical complications. One young mother endured 12 hours of agonizing contractions, preeclampsia, fever, and an emergency C-section, all while trying to bring her underweight son safely into the world.

In the middle of that pain and fear, her boyfriend’s attempts to “help” crossed into unhelpful territory, leading to a sharp outburst from her and lasting tension between them. Now, with a newborn facing jaundice and her own recovery demanding support, she’s left wondering if her reaction during labor was too harsh — or if the real issue lies elsewhere.

‘AITA for treating my BF too harshly during the birth of our son?’

The story begins with the exhausting labor process and the boyfriend’s unhelpful comments.

Yesterday afternoon me and my boyfriend welcomed my son. However my boyfriend is still upset about how I treated him when I was in active labor.

This is my first baby and honestly the contractions was probably the worst pain I ever experienced in my life. I was sobbing and screaming because just how painful the...

At that point I was having contractions like that for the past 12hrs prior to going to the hospital…but it started to become back to back when I was in...

My boyfriend he was trying to helpful to his credit he was holding my hand and rubbing my head. But about 3hrs in it started to overstimulate me and I...

So I started hitting his hand away from me, but the breaking point for me was when every time I was feeling a contraction, he started saying stuff like “when...

or “ I think if you followed my advice he would be out by now” just condescending remarks that I didn’t want to hear. So I snapped on him told...

He then proceeds to argue with me and I started to cry just out of frustration with the pain and the fact he wasn’t coming as fast as I wanted...

Because I knew she would truly be what I needed and he storms out the room and doesn’t return back until they said I needed a c-section and allowed him...

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The aftermath includes the baby’s health issues and the boyfriend’s ongoing cold shoulder.

Our son was born yesterday but he’s still giving me the cold shoulder for that disagreement. Which is really messing with me emotionally because I need his support. My baby...

I also have preeclampsia and I feel so weak so I feel like I can’t properly take care of him like I want too. He’s only talking to me if...

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The update clarifies medical details and adds tension with hospital involvement.

Update: to answer few of your concerns the hospital staff has been so good to me and my baby, the reason why didn’t give me an epidural right when I...

so they were running test still to make sure it was safe enough to do it and wasnt like an infection , plus the anesthesiologist was hard to track down.

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As far as my boyfriend he’s been a lot kinder this morning up until the staff made me talk to a social worker and a DV counselor so he’s upset...

but he thinks they’re trying to find a reason to take the baby…because of how young they’re I don’t that’s the case but not really any resolution but we’re trying...

Labor is an intensely physical and emotional event where the birthing person’s needs must come first. Contractions at only 3 cm dilation mean pushing is impossible — any suggestion otherwise shows a lack of basic understanding. The boyfriend’s comments, even if meant to encourage, added stress during a dangerous time with preeclampsia.

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The young mother’s outburst and request for space were natural responses to overwhelming pain, overstimulation, and frustration. Hormonal shifts, fear for the baby’s safety, and physical exhaustion make emotional regulation extremely difficult. Dismissing or arguing back escalates the situation instead of providing support.

Obstetrician Dr. Michel Odent has long emphasized that “a laboring woman needs to feel safe and undisturbed — external interference, even well-intentioned, can slow progress and increase distress.” Here, the boyfriend’s actions shifted focus from her needs to his ego when she set a boundary.

True support means listening, validating pain, and stepping back when asked — no grudges afterward. The boyfriend should apologize and educate himself on labor stages. With a premature, jaundiced newborn and the mother’s recovery from preeclampsia and C-section, both need teamwork, not coldness. Hospital involvement (social worker/DV counselor) is standard protocol for young parents — it protects everyone and offers resources, not punishment.

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Check out how the community responded:

The online community overwhelmingly sided with the original poster, calling the boyfriend’s behavior unacceptable and emphasizing that nothing said during active labor should be held against the mother.

Most readers labeled the boyfriend as insensitive or worse, with strong NTA verdicts:

BalanceActual6958 − My labor nurses would have told my husband to shut the f__k up if he said that to me

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zedicar − Your boyfriend is an ass. Best wishes for a speedy recovery

Britofile − If this is how he acts when you're in labor, what's he usually like? He must be absolutely insufferable. What a complete ass. NTA.

WifeofBath1984 − NTA he's the one who owes you an apology. It's obvious he has no idea what he's talking about when he's telling you to push when you're only...

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You were IN. LABOR. He sounds like an unbearable a__hole. I don't even know how he's justifying his terrible behavior to himself.

dagger-mmc − Ew what the f__k? NTA. You were IN LABOR. GIVING BIRTH. And he made it about him. In one of the most serious and scary moments people can...

Many shared personal labor experiences to validate her reaction and urged her to reconsider the relationship given the age gap:

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definitelytheA − Have given birth 4 times. It is natural law that anything that comes out of a laboring mother’s mouth is off limits for arguments later. Next time he...

Then you were cut open to deliver your baby safely. All while your body is having massive hormones flowing. Tell him to do some reading about transition in labor.

One labor, I couldn’t stand to have anything touching me. I started pulling off my gown as they were wheeling me down the hall to delivery, and my poor husband...

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The doctor, bless her heart, told him no one cared, and anyone giving birth is the absolute boss over what they need. He heeded her advice.

River_star − **Girl, you are 15, and he is 18!? ** There is so much wrong with this! Your mom didn't want him in the delivery room because he would...

audriaide − I just went through your post history and what a mess. This man took advantage of you, baby trapped you, and now is punishing you for lashing out...

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A few added humor or direct criticism while still supporting her:

Rich-Ad-4654 − Your bf is far too b__t-hurt for someone who didn’t push a baby outta his vag.

ConnectionRound3141 − NTA Your bf was mansplaining giving birth. Oh he can f__k right off right now. Seriously. Hey you, f__k off. Hopefully he has a mother that will beat...

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Or maybe your granny can do it. Lots of babies are born jaundice… and 5lbs is not that underweight. You did good mama. Very very good.That was a complicated birth...

This experience highlights how labor demands absolute focus on the birthing person’s comfort and safety — no exceptions. Words and actions during intense pain are not held to normal standards, especially when hormones, fear, and medical risks are involved.

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The boyfriend’s cold shoulder after such a traumatic birth adds unnecessary stress during a vulnerable recovery period. True partnership means showing up fully, even when it’s uncomfortable, and letting go of ego. You did nothing wrong by setting boundaries in the moment. Would you expect complete forgiveness for anything said during labor, or do you think grudges have no place there? How can a partner best support someone through a complicated birth and postpartum without making it about themselves?

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