AITA for telling my wife that my SIL will always have say in my kids lives?

Blending families after loss is never simple. Emotions run deep, roles feel fragile, and everyone is trying to protect what matters most—especially the children. In this case, a widowed father remarried years after losing his first wife, only to find himself caught in a painful power struggle between his new spouse and his late wife’s sister.

What started as support during tragedy has now turned into a battle over boundaries, authority, and belonging. When the situation escalated to police involvement, harsh words were exchanged—and one sentence may have changed everything.

‘AITA for telling my wife that my SIL will always have say in my kids lives?’

He begins by clarifying the family’s background after tragedy reshaped their lives:

I realize the title might be a bit confusing so let me try to clear up the background first. I M(43) had a wife previous to my current wife.

My late wife sadly passed away due to illness around 5 years ago and her sister has been coming around daily since then to help out with my kids by...

He explains how deeply involved his sister-in-law has become:

She has basically taken the mother role on herself for my two kids currently M(6) and F(11). I married my current wife a few months ago, and she doesn’t work...

Now my wife has decided that we don’t need my SIL to be coming around anymore because she can perform all the typical stay at home mom duties herself and...

He insists he tried to explain his children’s emotional ties:

I talked to my wife about this multiple times and have told her that my SIL is very important to my children and they are still related to her even...

Now here’s the main issue: yesterday when my SIL went to pick my kids up from school she found out that my wife had already gone earlier in the day...

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Police became involved after a confrontation at the house:

When my SIL showed up at the house to confront her, my wife called the cops on my SIL and said she was trespassing. I didn’t know about any of...

When I got back to my house I got into a fight with my wife and told her that my SIL will always have a place over her in my...

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He closes by acknowledging the emotional complexity:

Now I know why my wife is upset with me, but my SIL stepped into our family after a tragedy and while we technically don’t NEED her, we all still...

I want her and my wife to be able to get along and coexist because I want them both in my family, but if it comes down to it I...

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Feel free to ask clarifying questions and I’ll answer them when I can. I’m currently at work so I might not get to them right away.

From a family systems standpoint, this conflict reflects unresolved role definition after a major loss. When the children’s mother passed away, the sister-in-law stepped in during a period of crisis. Over five years, her involvement likely became part of the emotional structure of the household. For the children, she may represent stability, continuity, and a living connection to their late mother. Removing or reducing that presence without preparation can feel like a second loss, especially at such young ages.

At the same time, remarriage fundamentally reshapes family hierarchy. A spouse typically becomes the primary adult partner and co-decision-maker in the home. When the husband told his wife that the SIL would always have a place over her in the children’s lives, he unintentionally destabilized the marital foundation. Even if he meant it emotionally, the phrasing communicates permanent secondary status. Over time, that can erode trust, intimacy, and cooperation within the marriage.

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The wife’s actions—removing the children from school early and calling the police—suggest an escalation fueled by insecurity and perceived exclusion. While those choices were disproportionate and harmful, they may stem from feeling sidelined in her own home. If she expected to step into an active parental role but found those responsibilities already claimed, she may have interpreted it as rejection rather than shared caregiving. Poor communication appears to have amplified assumptions on all sides.

Ultimately, the children’s emotional safety must remain central. Power struggles between adults can create anxiety, divided loyalties, and confusion. The healthiest path forward would involve clearly defined boundaries, shared parenting agreements, and possibly professional family counseling. The goal should not be to choose between aunt and wife, but to create a structure where extended family support and marital partnership can coexist without competition.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

Many users immediately questioned what the children actually want:

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RatherBeAtTheBeach44 - INFO - what do your children want? That should be the most important consideration.

Trevena_Ice - INFO: Why wasn't that discussed before marriage?

Several commenters criticized the lack of communication before tying the knot:

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Auntie-Mam69 - NtA. It was nuts of your wife to go around you to claim these kids away from SIL, and worse for her to call the cops on SIL...

I see that you did tell your wife several times to back off, that SIL is permanently in your kids' lives and has precedence over her because she has been...

SuperWomanUSA - The only answer is ESH. As someone mentioned, you need to figure out how you assimilate your “current wife” (which sounds temporary IMO) into the life of your...

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But this is a conversation that should have happened A LONG TIME AGO. How long did you date your “current wife”? Have you guys had conversations around what her relationship...

Are you open to her adopting them? Calling her mom? It sounds. Like the expectations have not been discussed AT ALL. I am happy to see that you are making...

They’re at a very young age and I’m sure your SIL is working to keep her sister’s memory and presence in her kids life alive. I think you need to...

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1. Discuss with your “current wife” your expectations around her relationship with the kids

2. Talk to your kids about what they want? They’re quite young and may not understand the “what kind of relationship” they want dynamic, but I’m certain there’s a kid...

3. Have a conversation with your SIL and how there is also a balance to be had. I think again the SIL is afraid the kids will forget her sister...

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Yes life goes on, but I’m sure in her heart she’s sad that she (her sister) won’t be part of their lives. .

Others believed all adults contributed to the conflict:

cassowary32 - ESH. It sounds like your wife wanted to be a SAHM and neither of you took the other seriously when trying to negotiate your new roles. I'm curious...

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SmaugTheHedgehog - ESH- none of the adults handled this well You- There should have had this conversation about how the new wife’s role would look with the kids the moment...

That was 100% on you as the dad bringing in a new person into your kids’ lives. Your wife- Taking the kids out early to bond with them?

Sure, if she talked to you first. But not communicating + calling the cops is not at all right. SIL- hard to say with as little details as you provided...

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I get her being upset but going to the house to confront your wife was not the right action. Were the kids present? If SIL confronted (an aggressive word), was...

Those kids could easily have heard and seen this, and this is not something they should witness. I understand that she was hurt/angry but even still, the SIL should have...

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Some commenters defended the sister-in-law and raised red flags about the wife:

Spare-Article-396 - The problem really is the lack of communication between you and your wife. She’s obvs seen dollar signs and wants to be a SAHM, and yet, neither of...

So it doesn’t make sense to just march in waving the marriage certificate and make everything change immediately.

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Your wife’s power move is b__lshit, and tbh, it would make me think real hard about a divorce. I get that Reddit loves to mention that D word, but this...

She didn’t do it for the kids. that’s the metric you need to be measuring this by…did she do it for the benefit of the kids, or herself? Whether she’s...

(Also, exactly when did she get put in the school pick up list anyway? That’s neither here nor there though) And regardless of what anyone argues about your SIL ‘trespassing’,

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anyone with half a brain cell would know that you would step in to squash any charges. So what’s the point? It’s to assert power.

Did your kids witness their ‘mom figure’ being hauled off in a cop car? ??? Couple all of this, with her immediately quitting after the wedding? You’ve got yourself a...

Y t a for not clarifying all this before marriage, she’s a massive one for many reasons. I’m going with ESH. But way more her than you. But that will...

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corgihuntress - You have a wife problem. I wish you'd figured this out before you got married, but calling the cops was way way way out of bounds

and I think you might need to take this time without her to figure out if she's the person you thought and whether having her in your life will damage...

because she's making them a battle ground and that's unacceptable. She had your SIL arrested in front of your children. Think about the damage that causes. Think about what she...

Others argued he undermined his own marriage:

LowBalance4404 - You are setting your wife up for failure and to be an outsider in her own home. You are also absolutely setting up this power struggle as your...

You and your wife need to sit down and talk about roles and boundaries. And then the three of you need to sit down and learn to work together. At...

aj_alva - YTA. You should have discussing these arrangements in detail before marrying your wife. You have made it worse by refusing to allow her to contribute to your family...

Serious question: If you wanted someone to sit by quietly and do nothing while you raise children with your SIL, why did you get a whole wife? You could have...

Altruistic_Fondant38 - YTA. . why didnt you just marry the SIL and not bring a 3rd innocent party into this? If you and the kids want SIL around so much,...

Where is your wife supposed to fit in in all this? Why does she have to be a bystander when she is your wife and their step mother. The kids...

Additional commenters pointed to unresolved tension and shifting family dynamics:

KronkLaSworda - ESH except SIL. And the kids. Probably. You and your "current" wife, to use your term, should have had a LONG discussion about child raising before you tied...

This is a problem that you both created through assuming that you were on the same page when you 100% were not. I'm not sure this can be fixed, to...

jrm1102 - ESH - Your SIL should not have confronted her. The kids were safe and home - Your wife shouldnt have been underhanded about this and calling the cops...

Your kids have a step mother now. Your situation has changed. Your SIL doesnt have to disappear but things obviously need to change and you wont.

emilyj308 - I wont say YTA because I understand why you feel the relationship with SIL is important, however I do feel for your wife.

She isnt being allowed to step into the role of wife or stepmother because SIL is there daily. I have a wonderful relationship with my brother and sister but I...

She can be an auntie without your wife being pushed to the back of the line. It is time for SIL to take a step back and let you move...

[Reddit User] - I need the wife's POV If in her perspective husband tells her he wants her to bond with the kids etc but SIL won't give up any...

(it's possible she's protective of her sisters kids, understandably) like if the wife is home and the kids need to be picked up, why CANT she do it?

Why can't she cook them dinner? I assume she asked before going to such drastic measures. I also find it weird that SIL wouldn't just leave and call the husband...

For the kids it's obviously best for SIL to be involved in their lives but not mom's replacement. I don't see why she has to do everything at this point...

It's weird AF to have someone else play wife and mom to your husband and his kids, even if she didn't leave her job.

I assume OP is a good enough dad to not to bring a true crazy person into his children's life so I'm giving her the benefit of the doubt that...

At the heart of this conflict are two women who both, in different ways, see themselves as protectors of the same children. One stepped in during unimaginable loss. The other entered through marriage, expecting to build a life and family of her own. Without clear boundaries, those roles collided.

The real question may not be who has “priority,” but whether this family can redefine roles without turning the children into the battlefield. Can grief, remarriage, and extended family truly coexist under one roof—or does choosing one inevitably cost the other?

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