AITA for not caring that my siblings, grandparents and I upset mom by taking all of dad’s things when her husband moved in?

A 17-year-old boy and his sisters had removed all of their late father’s belongings from their home five years before their mother’s new partner moved in—but now she was demanding they be returned to her husband and half-siblings. At the time, she had intended to donate them all; her father’s parents and children rushed to preserve what she had willingly given away.

Complicating matters was her sudden remorse after the birth of her two new children, insisting that the clock, blanket, and keepsakes should represent “a family” rather than honor a man she had never met. The teenager refused, drawing a hard line between blood memories and mixed obligations.

‘AITA for not caring that my siblings, grandparents and I upset mom by taking all of dad’s things when her husband moved in?’

Mom announced her boyfriend’s arrival and offered Dad’s possessions for donation.

My dad died 7 years ago. I (17M) was 10 and my sisters were 17 and 18. 5 years ago my mom moved in her now husband. When she told...

Grandparents, sisters, and the boy divided Dad’s items while Mom stayed detached.

My grandparents said we'd take what we wanted. So my grandparents and sisters came over and mom didn't want anything so we divided it up between all of us. My...

My sisters didn't have the space where they were living for more than what they took. My mom had no actual problem with it at the time it looked like....

Years later, new babies triggered Mom’s reversal—she wanted everything returned.

My mom ended up marrying her husband. My sisters and I aren't close to him. She wanted me to be more than them because I'm the youngest and still live...

My mom gave birth to my two half siblings in the last two years and that changed things. She'd get upset that dad's stuff wasn't around anymore and recently she...

They told her she had freely let them take it all and they weren't about to see everything dad owned go to good will. My mom asked me to let...

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She said dad's watch would have been perfect for her husband. And dad's old blanket collection would have been great to share with the babies. I told her the watch...

She told me it would be a sweet idea to show him acceptance and I told her he'll never be my dad and will never get that kind of acceptance...

And I said the blankets should stay being used for dad's future grandkids and stuff. Not kids he has no relationship with. She mentioned a few other things of dads...

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Then she said we were all so cruel for taking everything when her husband was moving in. She said we didn't even give him a chance to be trusted and...

She told me we really hurt her feelings when we did it. I asked her why she didn't pick things to keep and she told me it wasn't hurtful at...

That her younger kids will never know dad and aren't his kids and we'll never be her husband's kids either. She said she didn't like it and we were like...

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And that I should care that her husband was disappointed and felt like we all hated him before giving him a chance by taking the watch. And that the babies...

Five years after a loss, a widow may finally feel safe enough to reminisce—especially after having more children, explains bereavement counselor Megan Devine. But the initial gift of items to blood relatives is legally and emotionally binding. The mother’s shift from “donation” to “sharing with stepfather” is a mixed bag, ignoring the grief of older children.

Contradictory views suggest that postpartum hormones or postpartum depression intensify the longing; two children in two years can disrupt identity. But the stepfamily’s demand for heirlooms like olive branches denies the first family its sacred claim. Socially, stepparent forums are filled with similar pleas—new spouses coveting watches, gadgets, rings—all denied.

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“The deceased’s children have primary emotional ownership of the mementos,” says therapist Dr. Pauline Boss in The Myth of Closure (2021). Forcing integration through artifacts creates resentment, not unity; the mother must grieve for her choices, not the survivors’ guilt trips.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

Most users slam the mother’s late grab, labeling it entitlement and erasure.

Usual-Canary-7764 − Tell your mother to get therapy for whatever crisis she seems to be going through and leave you out of it as you are not her emotional dumpster...

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Steups13 − Nta. Can you move in with your grandparents? She made the choice to donate your dad's belongings. She couldn't go to the goodwill to reclaim them, so tough....

295Phoenix − NTA Your mom is trying to erase your dad's existence and it's gross.

Discombobulatedslug − Is it a good watch? Yeah, her husband just wants a free watch . If they want something to remember your dad, give them a copy of a...

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nightcana − goodwill wouldnt have given anything back either

A few suggest PPD or grief waves but still back the teen’s boundary.

terrika_has_spoken − NTA There is no way you could be the AH and your feelings are completely valid. I’m not sure what is going on with your mom, but something...

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Why all of a sudden is she developing an emotional attachment to items she hasn’t had access to in years? Sounds trippy and you need to keep all of it...

RandomReddit9791 − NTA. So she didn't care about keeping your dad's stuff for herself or sentimental value, but now she'd rather that strangers have it than his own kids.

Tyranid_Queen − If she's had 2 babies in the last 2 years, she could be struggling with PPD, but she wouldn't even have an option if she had donated them,...

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Witty replies mock the “one family” logic with Goodwill hypotheticals.

VegetableBusiness897 − Why in the actual F would she think any of a complete strangers belongings should go to the man she married and his kids? Like is she really...

paper0wl − Mom: Hmm, think I’ll get rid of all my late husband’s stuff Everyone: Rescue mission! (time passes) Mom: Oh, my late husband’s stuff would be a great sign...

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Please give it back! Everyone: If we’d let you donate it, you wouldn’t be ABLE to get it back Mom: shocked pikachu face NTA

A widow’s discarded heirlooms became her older children’s lifeline to their father; her belated demand to repurpose them for a new husband and babies rightly met refusal. Preserving Dad’s legacy with his bloodline trumps forced blending.

Would you return a late parent’s watch to a stepparent as “acceptance”? At what point does a widow’s regret override her initial choice to let go?

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