AITA for forcing my daughter to share a birthday celebration with her twin brother?

A mom determined to raise her 14-year-old twins as individuals has always let them decide each year whether to throw a joint birthday bash or go separate ways. This time, her daughter Paige came buzzing with excitement about a girls-only themed party she’d already planned out in detail.

Just days later, though, the truth came out: Paige never actually ran any of it by her twin brother Dylan. He was crushed to learn he’d been left out entirely. Feeling for her son, the mom scrapped the separate party and told both kids they’d have to plan something together that worked for everyone. Paige now says her special day is ruined, while mom second-guesses whether she just undermined her own efforts to treat them as separate people.

‘AITA for forcing my daughter to share a birthday celebration with her twin brother?’

It all stems from the mom’s long-standing approach to giving her twins a choice every year:

I have two kids, Paige (14/F) and Dylan (14/M). As twins most years they’ve wanted to have a joint birthday celebration, but there have been a couple of years where...

They tell me a few weeks before their birthday in May which thing they want to do that year.

Paige jumped ahead this year and presented her mom with a full plan:

So this year Paige told me that she and Dylan had decided they wanted to have their own parties, and she and her friends had already picked a whole theme...

I approved Paige’s plan, and then a day or so later I asked Dylan what he wanted to do for his birthday party. At this point I learned that Dylan...

and me asking Dylan about it was the first he was hearing that he was expected to have his own party. His feelings were very hurt that Paige had cut...

After talking to Paige, the mom learned the real reason behind the solo decision:

So I spoke with Paige and she admitted that she and her friends had decided on their own to exclude Dylan because they felt that a boy would wreck the...

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I told Paige that it wasn’t okay for her to treat her brother that way and that the party I’d originally agreed to was now cancelled,

and that I expected her and Dylan to plan a joint birthday celebration with activities that all of their friends could enjoy. Dylan is much happier with this arrangement, but...

I’m worried that I might’ve made a misstep because normally I try very hard to treat my kids as individuals and not just as a pair of twins, and I’m...

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In the end, the mom started having doubts and added an update:

EDIT: I've already realized that making Paige and Dylan share a birthday celebration is an unreasonable punishment (for various reasons) and won't be doing so, y'all can calm down now....

At its core, this is about striking a balance between teaching respect and communication while granting teens growing independence. Paige clearly messed up by lying to her mom and sidelining her brother without a conversation—that behavior deserves consequences. Yet turning the birthday into a forced joint event essentially punishes her by taking away a day that’s supposed to be joyful and personal.

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Plenty of voices point out that at 14, gender differences and friend-group vibes start mattering a lot. Girls often crave that exclusive space for activities they’d feel awkward doing around boys. Child psychologist Eileen Kennedy-Moore, an expert on family dynamics, notes that “Teenagers are developing their individual identities separate from their family, and peer relationships become extremely important. Forcing inclusion can backfire and breed resentment.” (Psychology Today parenting column).

On the flip side, some sympathize with the mom over Dylan’s hurt feelings. A better route might have been requiring Paige to apologize and acknowledge the lack of respect, while still letting her have the separate party—and helping Dylan organize his own or find something fun. That way, the lesson lands without undermining the mom’s goal of individuality.

Practical fixes moving forward: Make separate parties the default unless both actively agree to combine. If one wants separate, the other doesn’t get veto power. Handle lying with lighter consequences (grounding, extra chores) instead of weaponizing the birthday. This teaches mutual respect without making twins feel chained together forever.

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Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Pretty much everyone online agrees the mom went too far, even while acknowledging Paige shouldn’t have lied or ghosted her brother.

Most feel forcing a joint party is unfair to a teenage girl wanting her own space:

poeadam − YTA I think. Having a mutual party should only happen if both kids want to do it. I can understand telling Paige that it was rude of her...

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and give him a heads up that she wanted her own party, and asking her to apologize, but forcing her to have a joint party is going too far.

CrankyWife − YTA. The girl planned a party for herself and her friends. The boy failed to do so. Now the girl is forced to put together another party to...

stray_girl − YTA. I’ve never been a teen boy but I have been a teen girl and I remember how insanely close I was with my friends and all the...

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Let her have the party she wants. They are two separate people. I’m also wondering - Why is it so important to your son to have the party together? Does...

Many argue the default at this age should absolutely be separate celebrations:

Money_Survey_9626 − YTA for forcing them to share birthdays. They don’t need to mutually decide to have them separately. This is an individual decision and it’s ridiculous to force them...

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mutualbuttsqueezin − YTA. They're teens now. It's completely reasonable that she wants her own party. And frankly it should be default at this point that they have separate parties. She...

[Reddit User] − Yta and how exactly do you see this working out? She isn't going to plan, she isn't going to participate; you'll be lucky if she shows up.

It's really going to end up a party for your son and no party for your daughter. They are two separate people. The default should be seperate.

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Several warn about long-term fallout if the joint party is framed as punishment:

EmpressJainaSolo − YTA for forcing a joint party. That could lead to your daughter turning her anger at you towards her brother. Have repercussions for lying and not talking to...

Inconceivable44 − YTA. Why does daughter need brother's permission to have separate parties? Have consequences for lying sure, but this is extreme. You'll be back on here after this joint...

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and not participating in a party that is supposed to celebrate her, that she didn't want, and is being used as a punishment. There is no way for this to...

A few asked for more context on why Paige felt she had to lie:

ndcollector − INFO: if Paige had talked to Dylan - and she wants her own party and he doesn’t - and they can’t come to an agreement - what happens?...

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anthony___fell − INFO: Have you asked Paige why she lied to you about coming to an agreement with Dylan about their birthday? If she had come to you and just...

I don't want to have a joint party this year" but Dylan had wanted one. .. how would you have handled it? Does the mutual agreement actually matter here? The...

Some suggest Paige may have felt pressure to share all along:

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Successful_Moment_91 − YTA she should have a minor punishment (not forcing the parties together) for lying and not discussing it with her brother.

However, OP is partially at fault if they make her feel obligated to share. I don’t understand why she wouldn’t have just told her brother she wants them separate again....

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Pepper-90210 − YTA. You have it completely backwards. The default should be that Paige gets her own birthday party unless they decide together to have a joint party.

You owe Paige an apology for making her feel like she did something wrong by wanting to celebrate her birthday with her friends. Paige deserves autonomy.

Finally, several highlight the natural divergence of interests between teen boys and girls:

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SomeoneYouDontKnow70 − YTA. There comes a time when boys' and girls' interests heavily diverge, and then a few years later, they'll converge again.

Your daughter is at a stage in life where she and her friends want to do girl stuff on her birthday, and having a bunch of boys at the celebration...

Of course Dylan is happier with this arrangement because he got his way, and you've forced your daughter to invite him and his friends to her party. Imagine how you...

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CrystalQueen3000 − YTA Not leaving much space for individualism if you force them to have joint parties. They are now teenagers and Paige clearly wants to do her own thing.

colsanders419 − As a twin myself, YTA and i don't understand why you're asking. You said you try to not treat them as a package deal but your daughter didn't...

This whole situation highlights just how tricky raising twins can get—you want them close, but you also have to honor their growing differences as teens. Paige definitely should have communicated better, but forcing a shared party risks turning a celebration into resentment on both sides.

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What would you have done in this mom’s shoes? How do you teach respect without stifling a teen’s need for their own space? Drop your thoughts in the comments!

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