AITA for telling a girl my kid does not need a new mom?

Becoming a single parent through unconventional means already comes with unique challenges, especially when grief and identity intersect with unwanted romantic or parental advances. This story follows a 33-year-old gay man raising his 10-month-old child alone after his longtime platonic best friend—co-parent through artificial insemination—passed away from birth complications.

A new woman joined his friend circle and quickly fixated on him despite polite rejections and clear disclosure of his sexuality. Her behavior intensified dramatically after meeting the baby, culminating in persistent messages and a bold claim that the infant “already loves” her and needs her as a mother. What makes the situation more complicated is his sharp, final shutdown of her advances, which left some friends feeling he was unnecessarily harsh.

‘AITA for telling a girl my kid does not need a new mom?’

A new face in the friend group ignores clear boundaries from the start

I 33m am I single father to my 10 month old baby. Their mom passed away after birth do to some complications. We were never a couple just best friends...

We lived together and everything but we not sexualy attracted to each other, I'm gay and agree was Ace. Couple of months back my regular group of friends added this...

Anna 27, I didn't much care for her but she tried coming on way too strong and flirting with me. I tried rejecting her nicely and even told her I'm...

Obsession escalates sharply after one brief encounter with the baby

Last week I invited my friend over for dinner, I love to cook and bake, and she showed up. After seeing my kid she somehow became even worst. She wanted...

I took my kid away and sent him to my dad's place(lives next door to me) she would not drop it. After everyone had gone home she tried adding me...

A delusional claim triggers a firm and final rejection

My last straw was wren she said and I quote "all kids need a mom and I'd be the perfect one for both of you, he already loves me" I...

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and does not even remember her face, that she will never be anything to us and that if my kid ever got another parent it would be a second dad.

I then told her to check her delusional self and never talk to me again. I blocked her after that everywhere. Most of my friends are on my side but...

Edit to add Because it seems to have cause some confusion I'll explain here. Me and my friend were never s__ual.

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We have/had known each other for 20 years and the only people that still think we were a couple are her grandparents who are just old and don't remember stuff...

We both have always wanted to be parents and decided to go for it with the help of doctors via Artificial insemination...

This situation underscores the importance of respecting clear boundaries, particularly when someone’s identity, grief, and parental role are involved. The father communicated his sexuality and disinterest early and politely, yet the woman persisted with escalating advances that shifted from romantic pursuit to an inappropriate claim on his child’s life. Declaring that a 10-month-old “already loves” her after one meeting and insisting she is the “perfect mom” reflects a troubling disregard for reality and consent.

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Those suggesting he was overly harsh may undervalue how repeated polite refusals were ignored, forcing a stronger response to reassert safety and autonomy. His words, while cutting, were proportionate to the intrusion and aimed at ending contact decisively. The few dissenting friends risk minimizing a pattern that could border on harassment.

From a wider perspective, single gay parents frequently encounter assumptions that children require a mother figure, which can feel invalidating and reductive. These projections overlook diverse family structures and the validity of same-sex or single parenting. Prioritizing child safety and personal boundaries is essential; when ignored, firm language becomes necessary self-defense.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Nearly all commenters strongly support the father, describing the woman’s actions as creepy, delusional, and potentially unsafe while defending his right to shut her down firmly.

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Ok-Status-9627 − NTA. I mean, for a second I was thinking you referring to her as "a girl" when she is 27 years old was dismissively sexist.

But then, as I read further, I realised though she's legally an adult, she's clearly not grown up enough to understand "No". And lets not forget, you tried rejecting her...

(I'm not sure here whether she assumed bi given you had a child with your platonic soulmate. ) Despite the no, she dogged you further, and seemingly became fixated.

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Hopefully, she's just bonkers, not mentally ill, because if she's bonkers then your harsh words might give her the wake up call she needed.

wolf_spark − Because it seems to have cause some confusion I'll explain here. Me and my friend were never s__ual.

We have/had known each other for 20 years and the only people that still think we were a couple are her grandparents who are just old and don't remember stuff...

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but love their great grandkid like crazy. We both have always wanted to be parents and decided to go for it with the help of doctors.

More-Yogurtcloset531 − NTA. Her obsessive behavior and especially that she mentioned the kid loved her after seeing him once put squarely in the delusional nutball category.

She also sounds potentially dangerous. You can never be too firm with people like that. Anyone saying your response was harsh should be kept at a distance. If she ever...

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GimmeSammichs − NTA You JUST met this chick? You’re gay? And she’s still trying to force her way into your family? Sounds like you got a stage 5 bunny boiler...

Keep her away at all costs. Tell your friends why then any friend trying to invite her around- keep them away too. You and your baby’s safety could be at...

Several add practical advice and reinforce the need for vigilance, viewing his response as fully justified.

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SadLocal8314 − Save the texts etc. Just in case she comes back, and you have to request a restraining order. Also, check your home security and update as needed.

tiniru − NTA, extremely creepy behavior on her part. you had already told her nicely to knock it off and she didn't, at that point you have every right to...

RRT_93 − NTA and I'm so sorry for your loss. Sending big hugs from an internet stranger.

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A few express empathy for his loss while firmly backing his decision.

Goblyyn − NTA What do you mean only *most* of your friends are on your side! ? Your side vs the side of some crazy baby obsessed h__ophobic stalker. Those...

KeyFeeFee − That’s so creepy. She caught baby rabies and lost her damn mind. For sure she can’t be around you or your child at all, and I’d consider the...

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MotherofPuppos − Yeah, NTA. Why did your friend bring her with? It just doesn’t make sense to me given the fact that you are openly gay and already had to...

The father acted decisively to protect his child and personal space after polite rejections were repeatedly ignored and escalated into delusional parental claims. While a minority felt his tone was too harsh, the majority see it as a necessary boundary after her behavior crossed into concerning territory. Safety and autonomy clearly outweigh sparing feelings in this context.

Have you ever had to shut down someone who wouldn’t accept rejection? How do single parents handle unsolicited “help” or assumptions about family structure? What’s the line between being polite and firmly protecting your boundaries? Share your experiences or thoughts below!

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