Aita for backing my sil up and kicking my wife’s friend out of house for touching my niece?
What began as a tense but straightforward house conflict quickly spiraled into something far more serious. A man stood up for his sister-in-law after his wife’s friend showed up drunk and touched a baby without washing her hands. That part seemed clear-cut.
The real explosion came later. After the friend accused him of having something inappropriate going on with his sister-in-law, his wife decided to end the friendship. Instead of letting the issue rest, he added fuel to the fire by saying he would have divorced her if she hadn’t cut the friend off. That single sentence shifted the entire debate online.


The frustration had been building long before that night



Then came the incident that pushed everyone over the edge



His wife reacted decisively but he went further




On the surface, protecting a baby from a drunk visitor seems reasonable. Supporting his sister-in-law in asking the friend to leave wasn’t inherently wrong. Most parents and caregivers would agree that hygiene and sobriety matter around infants.
The deeper issue lies in what happened afterward. Once the wife chose to end the friendship on her own, the conflict had essentially been resolved. Introducing the threat of divorce at that point shifted the focus from the friend’s misconduct to the husband’s reaction.
Relationship experts often caution against using divorce as a weapon during arguments. Dr. John Gottman of The Gottman Institute has found that introducing threats of separation during conflict increases insecurity and destabilizes trust. Even when meant as emphasis, those words can linger long after the argument ends.
If divorce truly represents a non-negotiable boundary, it should be discussed calmly and thoughtfully, not as a reactionary statement. In this case, empathy might have been more helpful. The wife had just lost a friend she trusted. A supportive conversation could have strengthened the marriage instead of shaking it. Repair now likely requires a sincere apology and reassurance that the marriage isn’t conditional on perfect responses in heated moments.
Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:
Many users agreed he was justified in kicking the friend out





![[Reddit User] − Yes, you’re the a__hole. Both your wife and your SIL are correct in why. She already was breaking the friendship, but you and your f__king rage boner...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/wp-editor-1772615753248-6.webp)




Others strongly criticized the divorce comment







Some comments were blunt even harsh




![[Reddit User] − Firstly the title makes it seem like a__ault . (I understand that English is not your first language, but it's hugely misleading)](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/wp-editor-1772615712213-5.webp)




In the end, most people agreed that protecting the baby wasn’t the problem. The real damage came from a single sentence spoken after the conflict had already been resolved. Words like “divorce” carry weight, especially when used in anger. He stood his ground over safety. But did he undermine his own marriage in the process? If you were in his place, would you have handled it differently?
