AITA for temporarily moving out of the home I share with my husband until my pregnancy is over?
A pregnant woman faced escalating hostility from her stepchildren—fueled by their mother’s explosive reaction to the news—culminating in physical attempts to hit her stomach. With blood pressure spiking and doctors urging stress reduction, she relocated to her parents’ home until delivery.
Her husband supports the move fully, but in-laws accuse her of abandoning the family and “letting the ex win.” As court battles loom over alienation and therapy, she wonders if protecting herself and the baby makes her unreasonable to others enduring the fallout.

‘AITA for temporarily moving out of the home I share with my husband until my pregnancy is over?’
The family blended smoothly until the pregnancy announcement shattered civility:





The ex’s reaction ignited chaos:





Alienation quickly turned the children hostile:






Health risks forced the decision:




In-laws criticized the choice:






Parental alienation combined with incited violence creates profoundly unsafe environments, especially during pregnancy when stress directly impacts maternal and fetal health. Prioritizing removal from harm aligns with medical guidance and ethical duty to the unborn child.
Documenting threats, pursuing protective orders, and seeking emergency court relief address immediate dangers while building cases against alienation. Therapy (once approved) aids deprogramming harmful beliefs instilled in children.
In-laws’ pressure often stems from denial or loyalty conflicts, but framing absence as “abandonment” ignores survival needs. Long-term, supervised visitation or restricted access may prove necessary until stability returns.
Support networks, legal advocacy, and self-care preserve resilience—modeling healthy boundaries benefits all children involved.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Everyone overwhelmingly declared NTA, emphasizing the mother’s duty to protect herself and the baby from clear physical danger:











Many urged aggressive legal action and permanent safeguards:






A couple criticized in-laws’ stance and suggested exposure:


Threats to an unborn child forced a heartbreaking but necessary separation, prioritizing health amid alienation and violence. Support flows for the choice, yet long roads of court, therapy, and boundaries lie ahead.
When children’s safety clashes with blended-family ideals, whose well-being claims priority—the vulnerable newborn or the manipulated older siblings? If alienation poisons bonds, can love endure distance, or does protection demand permanence? How might documenting, restraining orders, and therapy rebuild—or redefine—what family means here? Your insights matter—share below.
