AITA because I don’t make an effort to co-parent with my child’s father?

A young mom has been mostly solo parenting her almost-2-year-old son since birth. The father refused to sign the birth certificate, avoided the hospital out of child support fears, and has provided minimal support—one pair of Jordans, one pack of diapers and wipes—while rarely initiating visits.

She offers FaceTime calls and occasional meetups, but he often misses calls or adds requests for favors. After a fallout over boundaries, she stopped going out of her way. He now blames her for the distance and for their son crying during visits. She’s content with the positive male role models already in her son’s life and wonders if she’s wrong for not pushing harder for co-parenting.

‘AITA because I don’t make an effort to co-parent with my child’s father?’

The relationship with the father has been strained from the start:

I have a son who will be 2 in July, and I don't put forth a lot of effort for my son to see his father. Background... His father did...

He did not want him to have his last name and doesn't. He didn't come to the hospital when he was born because he thought he would automatically be put...

She still facilitates some contact:

I will FaceTime a few times out of the week, but he doesn't always answer. If he calls back, it's too late or the next day. And if we meet...

Like can you take me to the corner store or can you drop me off of my friends house. Last time, we met up and had a fallen out, so...

Over the year and nine months, he has only brought his son, a $70 pair of Jordan's, one big box of pampers and wipes.

He places blame on her:

He complains that him not seeing his son is my fault. His son crying when he sees him is also my fault. He doesn't have a car, but he gets...

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If I don't call or take the initiative, it won't happen. And I'm ok with that. My son is not without proper male father figures or role models in his...

Co-parenting requires mutual effort, clear communication, and shared responsibility. When one parent consistently avoids legal, financial, and emotional involvement from the beginning—refusing paternity acknowledgment and minimal contributions—it shifts the dynamic to single parenting with occasional contact.

The mother’s attempts at FaceTime and meetups show initiative; his inconsistent responses and conditional visits do not. Blaming her for a toddler’s stranger anxiety (common with infrequent contact) ignores his role in building familiarity.

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Child development experts note that quality, consistent relationships matter more than forced exposure to unreliable figures. Dr. Kyle Pruett, fatherhood researcher, emphasizes “children thrive with involved, dependable adults—quantity without reliability can confuse more than help.”

Pursuing formal child support and visitation through courts could clarify rights and obligations, but only if he engages. Until then, protecting energy for stable role models avoids teaching a child that minimal effort deserves maximum accommodation. Her boundaries prioritize the child’s emotional security over an absent parent’s convenience.

Check out how the community responded:

Online, users overwhelmingly declared her not the asshole, praising her for carrying the load alone while criticizing the father’s lack of effort:

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Many encouraged “dropping the rope” and stopping extra facilitation:

tatersprout − NTA That's not what coparenting is. You are making all the effort and he is giving nothing. Drop the rope. If he wants to see his kid, he...

You are not responsible for making his life easier nor doing extra stuff for him. He doesn't even care enough to make visitation happen. Think about that. You already have...

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DinaFelice − You have made an effort to co-parent. Your ex is the one who isn't making an effort. He can't even be bothered to make sure he's available for...

Anyone giving you a hard time should be told, "How kind of you to want to give Ex a ride so he can visit more easily. I hope you and...

Final_Figure_7150 − This man has refused to sign the birth certificate, won't pay child support, won't do anything or provide anything to support you and your son and he won't...

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He wants more time, fine he can go through the courts to arrange custody. He won't, because then he'd have to pay child support. Don't teach your son that this...

ang2515 − Nta but stop doing Cpr on his relationship with your child. If he wants to see your son he will but if he doesn't actually want to its...

rjhancock − NTA as it requires both to work together. ...

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Several questioned his legal status and urged formal action:

Budget_Lab6181 − Correct me if I’m wrong but if he didn’t sign the birth certificate doesn’t that mean that he isn’t even legally the child’s father?

Equivalent-Moose2886 − NTA. You have a choice to make: 1) Cut this guy out completely... 2) Force him to step-up - take a paternity test, pay child support and be...

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mak_zaddy − Co-parenting? Dude isn’t on the birth certificate and sounds like a b__. If he wants to be a dad he can go through the process to get his...

Others highlighted his minimal contributions and unreliability:

Purple-Warning-2161 − I’m sorry- he bought $70 Jordans for a 2 year old when he doesn’t have a job?

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Dear_Equivalent_9692 − NTA. Sounds like BD is a loser. Sorry you got pregnant by him.

lanurk − NTA. I had TLC No Scrubs in my head reading this

peggingpinhead − NTA. Your son doesn't need someone in his life who has to be incentivized to spend time with him.

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Roxxs − No you are not, the older your son gets, the more he’ll realize that his father really doesn’t care about him

blackmomba9 − NTA- this guy is going to blame you no matter what so he doesn’t have to take accountability.

butt_butt_butt_butt_ − NTA. What is it with deadbeats and overpriced shoes being the ONLY contribution? !

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Raising a child largely alone while an uninvolved parent points fingers raises tough questions about effort, responsibility, and what children truly need.

When one parent does the heavy lifting and the other opts out of basics, who really carries the co-parenting load? Is facilitating contact always the “right” thing, or can stepping back protect a child from inconsistent love? What message does chasing involvement send to both the child and the absent parent? How have you navigated similar imbalances?

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