AITA for being furious at my ultra traditional mother for almost feeding my baby a solid?

Bringing a newborn into the world often means navigating exhaustion, heightened emotions, and a flood of advice from well-meaning relatives. For first-time parents especially, boundaries can feel fragile, yet absolutely necessary, particularly when it comes to a baby’s health and safety. Cultural traditions, religious rituals, and generational expectations can complicate those boundaries even further.

In this case, one parent found themselves clashing hard with their ultra-traditional mother after a religious ritual nearly crossed a line they felt was non-negotiable. What followed was an emotional confrontation, divided family reactions, and a Reddit thread packed with strong opinions about consent, parenting authority, and where tradition should stop.

‘AITA for being furious at my ultra traditional mother for almost feeding my baby a solid?’

The situation began with a clear explanation of the baby’s age and dietary needs:

We have a new born who is too young to have anything other than milk. My deeply religious mother who was born and raised in India wanted to feed a...

The nearest equivalent would be Body of Christ. The offering was made of flour, sugar butter and water.

Despite repeated refusals, the mother continued pushing for the ritual:

My mother was told several times not to feed the baby, she eventually just put the food to my babies lips as a compromise that we didn't ok. I blew...

The backlash didn’t end there, as other relatives quickly came to the mother’s defense:

Her reply, as well as several other relatives since, was that she didn't actually feed the baby and this is a centuries old tradition and I'm massively overreacting

and being an a__hole towards my great mother who was trying to bless the baby.. Am I the a__hole for setting a boundary or am I being an overprotective first...

From a pediatric health perspective, medical guidelines are clear that newborns should consume only breast milk or formula for the first several months of life. Introducing solids, even symbolically, carries unnecessary risks including choking, digestive distress, and allergic reactions. While the amount may seem negligible, the concern lies not only in quantity but in exposure and precedent.

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From a psychological standpoint, early boundary violations often set patterns for future family conflict. When a caregiver disregards explicit parental instructions, it erodes trust and creates anxiety, especially for first-time parents already navigating vulnerability and responsibility. The emotional reaction in such moments is often less about the action itself and more about feeling unheard and overridden.

Culturally, traditions can hold deep meaning, but modern family systems require consent and adaptation. Many religious rituals have symbolic alternatives precisely to avoid physical risk. Blessings, prayers, and ceremonies do not inherently require physical contact with food, especially when doing so contradicts medical advice or parental consent.

Ultimately, healthy intergenerational relationships depend on respect for parental authority. Supporting a child’s spiritual or cultural identity should never come at the expense of their safety or the parents’ clearly stated boundaries. When tradition and parenting collide, communication and consent must take priority over custom.

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Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Many Redditors immediately sided with the parent, emphasizing parental authority and consent above tradition or intention:

Throwaway4dafood - NTA. Your child is your responsibility, not hers. If you don't want her to give her solid food or even have it near her mouth, you're more than...

Also, she went around you to try to fulfill her religious beliefs. There's no problem with being religious, but like the Catholic Church showed us: that doesn't allow you to...

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Edit: thank you very much to everyone for the gold, medals, comments, and comments with medal emojis :)

diminishingpatience - NTA. My mother was told several times not to feed the baby She refused to listen to you. this is a centuries old tradition and I'm massively overreacting...

Others focused on how the mother’s actions undermined the parent’s authority, regardless of cultural context:

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Particular_Title42 - Really, the bottom line is you said no and Mother did what she wanted anyway. She undermined you as a parent. NTA and nip that in the bud...

Most notably, I saw this: “According to the Hindu scriptures, the Annaprashana ceremony must not be performed for a child younger than 4 months or even after the completion of...

Some commenters used relatable analogies to explain why the “compromise” still crossed a line:

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dontspeaksoftly - NTA. Your mother pushed that boundary on purpose, and I think you're within your rights to be angry. It's like on a road trip when my older brother...

and I'd ask him to stop, but he'd say “I'm not touching you.” Your mother didn't put food in your baby's mouth but she was being disrespectful and rude.

Picdoor - INFO: why are you upset that the offering touched the babies lips? Is it a fear of a potential food intolerance, or something like that?

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I'm trying to give the benefit of the doubt here, and see if there's some kind of detail I'm stupidly looking over (Edit: benefit of the doubt was a good...

(Edit 2: honestly OP I have no answer for you, but I'm learning a lot from the replies, so imma just leave this here)

bamf1701 - NTA. It doesn’t matter if she actually fed the baby the food or not. You are the mother and you said “no” (or at least did not say...

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So the issue is not if she actually fed the baby or not - the issue is that she deliberately ignored your authority as the parent because of her religious...

Health concerns also featured heavily in the discussion:

sharirogers - NTA. Stand your ground on this. There's a reason why we aren't supposed to feed newborns anything but b__ast milk, not even water. For literally the first 4-6...

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Blessing the baby for a religious ceremony or holiday is perfectly fine, but they don't need to be fed the offering in order to be blessed. Edit: typo.

[Reddit User] - NTA. Keep your baby away from the iron age crazies as much as possible. God knows what other idiocy they believe.

RandomGuy_81 - Are you freaking out that she put the food to the lips…. .?

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Tdluxon - NTA You were very clear with her, and you have a good reason (the baby's health) and she did it anyways. You have the right to be upset.

ForeverSam13 - There was this story once about a guy whose wife and her parents went behind his back to get their kid baptized. .. guy ended up divorcing his...

It was just a little bit of water right? And it's an old tradition so it should be respected, right? Except OP never consented, and that's really messed up. So...

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It doesn't matter what she did, she did it without your consent. Your baby, your choice, end of story. All of these “compromise with your mom”

and “just let her do what she wants” responses miss the point that you didn't consent in the first place and she crossed a line. And I'm guessing she'd be...

dwells2301 - I'm going with overprotective since she didn't actually feed the baby. First kid?

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mizfit0416 - NTA - you don't know if you're baby will be food intolerant. Solid food at that age is bad for baby.

lilwildjess - Nta, this wasnt a compromise for your mom didnt even propose it before doing it. You never agreed to her putting the food to your baby mouth. Your...

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StAlvis - NTA The child can wait to choose its own religion

This story highlights how quickly good intentions can spiral into conflict when boundaries aren’t respected. For new parents, protecting a newborn often means saying no firmly, even to loved ones. When culture, religion, and family dynamics collide, emotions run high and misunderstandings deepen.

So where should the line be drawn between honoring tradition and respecting parental authority? Is placing symbolic meaning above explicit consent ever acceptable when it comes to a child’s wellbeing, or should “no” always be the final word?

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