AITA for only giving my mom one more chance to show me she wants to be there for me and saying no emergency getting in the way will make me give her another chance?
Her parents divorced when she was just one year old. But it wasn’t until much later that she truly felt what it meant to lose a parent—while that parent was still alive. After remarrying a widower with four children, her mother seemed determined to become the perfect caregiver for her new family.
Meanwhile, dance recitals, special events, and even simple one-on-one plans were quietly pushed aside. There was always a reason: a sick stepchild, a hospital visit, a death, a last-minute emergency. After years of coming second, she decided to give her mom one final chance. This time, there would be no exceptions.

‘AITA for only giving my mom one more chance to show me she wants to be there for me and saying no emergency getting in the way will make me give her another chance?’
It all began with a divorce she was too young to understand:

When her mom remarried, subtle changes started to add up:


Over time, “less time” turned into canceled plans:



She tried confronting her mom, but nothing really changed:



Even direct requests didn’t stick:


Attempts at bonding were short-lived:




Choosing to live with her dad felt inevitable:








Blended families can be complicated, especially for teenagers. Family therapist Patricia Papernow, author of Surviving and Thriving in Stepfamily Relationships, notes that children in stepfamilies often feel displaced when a parent overcompensates for a new spouse’s children.
In this case, the mother may believe she’s doing the right thing by supporting children who lost their mom. But consistent absence from her biological daughter’s life creates another kind of loss. The issue isn’t one missed recital—it’s a pattern.
Psychologically, this can resemble what some call a “living loss,” where a parent is physically present but emotionally unavailable. That kind of repeated disappointment can erode trust over time.
Repairing the relationship would require more than one appearance at a dance competition. It would take sustained effort, reliability, and a willingness to prioritize her daughter in visible ways. At the same time, the teenager has the right to decide how much access she’s willing to give someone who repeatedly lets her down.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
Social media users were overwhelmingly on her side, many felt she had already been far too patient:




Others pointed out the painful irony:





Some didn’t mince words about cutting contact:



After years of coming second, this 17-year-old isn’t asking for much—just one moment where her mother shows up and keeps her word. For her, the dance competition represents something bigger: proof that she still matters.
So what do you think? Should emergencies override a final chance, or does there come a point when repeated absence becomes the answer itself?
