AITAH for not not being “fat positive” even though my step daughter and her mom are?
How do you protect your young child’s relationship with food when a stepchild’s habits — shaped by a very different household — start influencing your home? For many stepparents, blending families means navigating deeply personal views on health, body image, and parenting styles.
One pregnant mom faces this challenge as her 16-year-old stepdaughter plans to move in full-time. Raised in a “fat positive” environment where overeating and junk food are normalized, the teen consumes large amounts of soda, snacks, and treats. The mom worries this will model unhealthy patterns for her 6-year-old daughter and future newborn. She doesn’t want to shame anyone’s body but also doesn’t want excess junk food as the norm. Her story highlights the tension between acceptance, health concerns, and household boundaries.

‘AITAH for not not being “fat positive” even though my step daughter and her mom are?’
The blended family has maintained a long-distance but consistent relationship.





The core concern centers on eating habits and household norms.












The main tension lies in differing household approaches to food, health, and body image. The stepdaughter was raised in an environment where large portions, frequent junk food, and “fat positivity” are normalized — yet this has led to obesity, binge eating, and bullying. The mom worries this modeling will affect her younger daughter and future newborn, especially since the stepdaughter will soon live full-time.
The mom’s concern is valid: childhood eating patterns influence lifelong habits, and excess sugar/junk food carries real health risks. However, labeling it “binge eating” or pushing change too aggressively can feel shaming, especially when the teen already faces external judgment. The father’s attempts to address it have triggered defensiveness and ex-wife backlash, showing the topic is emotionally charged.
Registered dietitian Evelyn Tribole, co-creator of Intuitive Eating, states that “health at every size focuses on well-being without weight stigma, but it still encourages joyful movement and balanced nutrition.” This means promoting health without moralizing body size — a balance the mom seeks.
Practical steps include setting clear household rules with the husband first: limit junk food purchases, establish portion guidelines, and model balanced eating as a family. Discuss rules openly with the stepdaughter before she moves — frame them as “how we do things here” rather than targeting her. Involve a neutral professional like a family therapist or registered dietitian specializing in adolescents. Encourage enjoyable physical activities together. Support the stepdaughter’s self-esteem while gently guiding healthier choices. Consistency and empathy prevent alienation.
Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:
The community strongly supported the mom. Most agreed that “fat positivity” doesn’t mean accepting unhealthy binge eating, especially around young children. They urged setting firm household boundaries.
Nearly everyone viewed the concern as legitimate and health-focused.








Many recommended professional help and clear communication.










Others stressed health over weight stigma.





This situation shows how food, health, and body image can become flashpoints in blended families. The mom’s concern for her young daughter’s future habits is understandable — children absorb what’s normalized around them. At the same time, the stepdaughter’s patterns come from years of different parenting, and change requires care to avoid shame.
Setting house rules around moderation, modeling balanced eating, and involving professionals can help everyone. Have you ever navigated differing food philosophies in a blended family? How did you balance health concerns with respect for individual choices?
