AITA for telling my dad he feels like my siblings and I are half siblings because of choices he made?
There were four siblings who once grew up in a complete family — until their mother passed away five years ago. A year later, their father remarried, and life slowly began shifting in ways the two oldest never fully agreed with.
He asked them not to talk about their late mom around the younger kids, arguing it would help them bond with his new wife as their “mom.” They went along with it, even though it didn’t sit right. Years later, the consequences are showing. The youngest now believes his older siblings are essentially adopted. And when their father admitted it feels like they’re “half siblings,” his 19-year-old daughter told him the truth: this distance didn’t happen on its own.

‘AITA for telling my dad he feels like my siblings and I are half siblings because of choices he made?’
The family once felt whole before everything changed:


Then new household rules quietly reshaped everything:



Over time, the emotional gaps between the siblings became clearer:


The youngest’s confusion started surfacing in unexpected ways:


A simple school project made the divide impossible to ignore:


Eventually, even their father noticed something wasn’t right:



Blending a family after the loss of a parent is rarely simple. Grief doesn’t move on a schedule, and children — especially at different ages — process it in very different ways. When a surviving parent remarries, the instinct to create stability is understandable. But stability built on silence can come at a cost.
The American Psychological Association notes that children benefit from maintaining a continuing bond with a deceased parent. Being able to talk about them, remember them, and keep their presence alive in stories helps integrate the loss in a healthy way. Suppressing those conversations can unintentionally complicate grief.
In this case, the father may have believed he was protecting the younger children. Instead, limiting open discussion created confusion. When a child invents explanations — such as believing siblings are adopted — it often signals that information hasn’t been shared clearly or honestly.
Family therapy could offer a space where everyone’s experience is acknowledged: the older siblings’ grief, the younger children’s confusion, and the father’s intentions. A blended family doesn’t require erasing the past. In fact, allowing room for both the memory of a late parent and the presence of a step-parent can create a stronger, more authentic bond over time.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Online users reacted strongly to the father’s choices.
Many felt he is now facing the consequences of his own decisions:





Others worried about the long-term impact on the younger kids:



Some shared deeply personal stories of similar experiences:
![[Reddit User] − NTA I’m sorry you lost your mom too soon - I lost my dad to a terrible accident when I was 14. Know this: You will feel...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/wp-editor-1772009862493-1.webp)





And a few didn’t mince words:



The father believed he was doing what was best for his younger children. The older siblings believe his choices quietly drove them apart.
Is protecting children from grief worth limiting the truth? And in a blended family, how do you honor the past without jeopardizing the present?
