AITA For Not letting my mum be in the room for the birth of my Son?

A 25-year-old man refused his mother’s request to be in the delivery room for their first child, despite her sudden obsession after years of separation. His 26-year-old partner had chosen two support people within the hospital—one for him, the other for her to decide. His mother, who had been largely absent from his life before the pregnancy, now barged in, rearranging the baby’s supplies and making him feel guilty every day about “witnessing his grandchild’s birth.”

What complicated the story was that she turned “disappointed” when he refused, arguing that the father deserved his own support person—ignoring that he was the support person. The baby was delivered safely, boundaries were maintained, and his mother’s postpartum visits are now strictly monitored with threats of limited contact if she pushes again.

‘AITA For Not letting my mum be in the room for the birth of my Son?’

The pregnancy sparked a sudden maternal surge.

Me(M25) and my Partner(F26) Are expecting our first child this friday and both of us are very excited. The only issue during this whole pregnancy has been my mum.

Past few years shes barely paid attention to my life and suddenly now im having a child she is always coming over to my house, doing things i tell her...

Mom fixated on witnessing the birth.

Recently she has been trying to get me to agree to her there to watch my son be born. I do not know what the restrictions of people there was...

and I have the full intent to have her wishes respected. But the past month my mum has been on my ass about her getting to see one of her...

Her pressure peaked with disappointment tactics.

She has now become Disappointed in me over the "choice" because as the father i should be allowed to have a support person in the room with me. I say...

Im at my wits end and shes only added more stress to me and my partner this whole pregnancy. I miss the days where I am invisible to her. ~Update~....

ADVERTISEMENT

Birth went off with no problems and now have a beautiful baby boy. She's been trying to come a lot but we have boundaries in place that all know and...

So far has worked and we may be discharged in a day and be able to go home with the lil one. I have only been able to read a...

The delivery room is a medical space, not an operating room; the laboring person controls access. The mother’s shift from absent presence to entitled spectator status bypasses hospital policy and the partner’s explicit choices. Supporting the mother in childbirth is the father’s role—requiring his own “support” undermines that obligation.

ADVERTISEMENT

Some argue that grandparents deserve emotional support, especially after having missed previous births. However, geography is not entitlement; the partner’s comfort trumps tradition. The mother’s history of neglect makes her request opportunistic, not loving.

Socially, childbirth has shifted from a public event to a private medical procedure. Obstetrician Sarah Buckley states, “Stress hormones from an unwanted presence can slow down labor; the team chosen by the mother optimizes physiology” (source: “Gentle Birth, Gentle Motherhood,” Buckley, 2009).

The couple’s update proves that the boundaries worked: The mother backed off, the baby was delivered safely, and the consequences of less contact would have been felt if she had pushed again.

ADVERTISEMENT

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Many users praise the dad for protecting his partner’s autonomy and hospital rules.

AMerrickanGirl − NTA. No one is entitled to be in the birthing room. It’s not a spectator sport. I would stop having the argument with your mother. If she brings...

Simply repeat “The answer has not changed and the subject is closed. Please do not ask us again”. If she won’t stop bugging you about it, leave the room/house or...

ADVERTISEMENT

It’s ok to be low contact or even no contact if she refuses to respect your reasonable boundaries. And tell the hospital to make your admittance private and they won’t...

FragrantEconomist386 − NTA. The person giving birth decides who she wants in the room. Personally, I'd want a doctor, a midwife and preferably also an experienced nurse. Maybe the father...

11SkiHill − Your mom is toxic and will ruin your marriage if you allow her to. The person giving birth says who is in the room. You are support. You...

ADVERTISEMENT

Tell Mom No. No is a complete sentence. Learn that now. Going forward, set boundaries and hold them. Baby's mom is in charge. Do not allow your mom to ruin...

Bartlaus − NTA. Am a father of four, was (obviously? ) present for each birth. You do not need a support person, you ARE the support person.

diminishingpatience − NTA. as the father i should be allowed to have a support person in the room with me Even if this were true, this really isn't about her...

ADVERTISEMENT

A few stress firm enforcement while validating the stress of pushy relatives.

TheIzzyGrace − NTA—I wouldn’t even allow your mom at the hospital until mom is ready for visitors. I have three kids and it’s too much pressure to have people in...

As a mom, you want time to bond with your new baby. Feeling like you have to rush that because people want to see the baby is not a fun...

ADVERTISEMENT

Speedy_Dragon46 − Absolutely NTA. My MIL also has boundary issues. I’ve learned over the years that the more you try to explain the harder they push. They try to make...

point out flaws in your arguments and as a last ditch effort- they apply the guilt trip. “No” is a full sentence op. “No and it’s not up for discussion”...

This should be a really exciting time for you and your partner and I’m so sorry you have this extra stress. Good for you for standing up for yourself and...

ADVERTISEMENT

Two quips keep it light without excusing the entitlement.

coastalkid92 − NTA. Good for you for protecting your partner's wishes while she undergoes a major medical moment. But it is time to put your mum in her place and...

WilliamTindale8 − You are not pushing back sufficiently about a ridiculous demand from your mother. Here is what I would do. Wait until the next time she brings up the...

ADVERTISEMENT

For the last time, you will not be in the delivery room when the baby is born. If you mention this again, I will go no contact with you and...

This sounds harsh but it’s not as if she has been a great mom to this point and you are going to have some firm boundaries now and then reinforce...

simply_clare − NTA. Easiest way (If possible) is not to tell her when your partner is in labour and (if your mother is lucky) send a photo once your baby...

ADVERTISEMENT

Bonus points if you do it ‘celeb style’ and just send a photo of baby’s foot or finger grasping either yours or your partner’s. Think it’s great that you’re backing...

The dad honored his partner’s birth plan and hospital policy; Mom’s disappointment doesn’t override medical autonomy. Boundaries held, baby arrived safely, and consequences for future oversteps are clear.

Who decides delivery-room access—the laboring parent or tradition? Have you had to hide labor timing from pushy relatives—how did it go?

ADVERTISEMENT
Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *