AITA for not allowing my daughter to visit her dad without her dog?
A 14-year-old girl with a chronic condition relies on her extensively trained seizure response dog, Sherry, for safety and anxiety relief. The dog has transformed her life — allowing her to attend school, join theater, and live more confidently.
Her parents (divorced 9 years) co-parent well, with the daughter visiting her dad 2-3 weekends a month. Three months ago, her dad moved in his new girlfriend (after only 6 weeks of dating). The girlfriend — whose name is Cherie (pronounced “Shuh-REE”) — insists Sherry stay home during visits because she “hates sharing her name with a dog.” The dad backs her, saying the daughter was “fine” without Sherry before and he “knows what to do.” The mom refuses to send her daughter without her medical support dog. Is she wrong for standing firm?

‘AITA for not allowing my daughter to visit her dad without her dog?’
The daughter has a chronic condition requiring a service dog:


Sherry changed everything:







The girlfriend escalated:




Update/clarifications:


















This is a clear case of prioritizing a new relationship over a child’s medical needs. Service dogs are legally recognized medical equipment — not pets — and denying access to one is akin to denying insulin or a wheelchair. Courts almost always side with the child’s health needs over an adult’s comfort.
The girlfriend’s complaint about the name is petty and manipulative, and the dad’s willingness to separate his daughter from her life-saving support dog raises serious red flags. Experts like disability rights advocates emphasize: “Service animals are not optional. They are essential accommodations under the ADA.”
Practical advice: Document everything — medical records, training certifications, daughter’s improved quality of life, and all communications. If he pursues court, you’ll have strong evidence. Suggest supervised visits at neutral locations (grandma’s house works temporarily). Therapy for your daughter could help her process the conflict. Your priority is her safety — not appeasing adults.
Check out how the community responded:
The Reddit community overwhelmingly supported the mom, calling her NTA and slamming the dad and girlfriend for putting petty feelings over the child’s medical needs:
Most people said let him take it to court — he’ll lose badly — and praised the mom for protecting her daughter:















This story is heartbreaking: a girl’s life-changing service dog is caught in adult pettiness and poor priorities. The mom is absolutely right to protect her daughter’s health — service animals aren’t negotiable. The dad’s willingness to separate them over a name issue is shocking, and most agree he’d lose in court.
What do you think? Have you dealt with service animals in family conflicts? Would you side with the mom or think the dad has a point? Share your thoughts in the comments!
