AITAH for complimenting my wife in front of my daughter?

A husband faced backlash from his ex-wife after repeatedly complimenting his current wife on her dramatic physical transformation following a severe car accident. After years of surgeries, physical therapy, depression, and significant weight gain, his wife lost 70 pounds through dedicated training and swimming, regaining confidence and self-care habits.

He openly praises her progress, including the weight loss, only for his ex to claim it makes their 20-year-old daughter feel body-shamed. The ex, who shares weight struggles with the daughter and has resisted help for either, accused the couple of fat-phobia, sparking debate over whether celebrating one person’s hard-won health journey indirectly hurts others with similar insecurities.

‘AITAH for complimenting my wife in front of my daughter?’

The wife endured a devastating car accident that led to years of medical interventions and deep depression.

Shortly after I met my wife she was in a bad car accident that resulted in 2 years of multiple surgeries and PT. She also went into a major depression,...

Over the past year, she committed to recovery, working with a trainer, swimming, and rebuilding her confidence.

Over the last year she has been working with a trainer she likes and doing a lot of swimming. Through this her physical abilities have improved and she is really...

Her self confidence has started to come back so she is doing her make up and getting dressed againt. I have been making sure to tell her how wonderful she...

The husband’s ex-wife intervened, claiming the compliments make their adult daughter feel shamed about her own weight issues.

Recently my daughter's mom called (daughter is 20) and said that it was cruel that I and everyone else were constantly telling my wife how great she looks and complimenting...

She says that my daughter feels body shamed around me and my wife. My wife has obviously undergone a very major transformation, that she has worked very hard for and...

My ex also has issues with her weight, and has refused to ever get any help or get our daughter help .. She thinks we are being fat phobic by...

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This situation illustrates the delicate balance between celebrating personal achievement and navigating family members’ insecurities. The husband’s praise supports his wife’s recovery from trauma, depression, and physical limitations—weight loss is one visible part of a larger health and confidence journey deserving acknowledgment. Positive reinforcement strengthens partnerships and mental well-being after hardship.

Opposing perspectives center on unintended comparative effects, especially when the daughter and ex share similar struggles. Hearing repeated focus on thinner appearance can trigger feelings of inadequacy, even without direct criticism. However, withholding genuine compliments to avoid others’ discomfort risks diminishing the wife’s accomplishment and teaching avoidance rather than self-acceptance.

Broader societal discussions around body positivity sometimes conflate appreciation of effort with judgment of others. True support means encouraging health without shame while addressing insecurities openly. At 20, the daughter benefits more from direct, loving conversation than filtered praise elsewhere. The ex’s involvement may reflect projection, complicating co-parenting dynamics.

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Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Many users strongly supported the husband, emphasizing his wife’s deserving praise and the daughter’s adult responsibility.

DependentDangerous28 − NTA - your wife deserves compliments and encouragement because of what she is going through. What you are doing is a very good thing. Be her rock!

Maybe you could have a chat with your daughter, as she is an adult, and explain your reasoning to her and tell her also that she looks good and encourage...

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But explain to her how important it is for you to say things like this to your wife to help her recover as best she can. Good luck OP.

[Reddit User] − NTA - Why is your EX getting involved in this? It takes dedication to lose weight and I’m sure your wife loved hearing compliments.

mcmurrml − Keep doing what you are doing. Your daughter is 20 years old not 12. She is responsible for herself.

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Fuzzy_Department2799 − NTA. Have a talk with your daughter who obviously has body issues. Tell her you love her and you will help her anyway you can,

but you will never stop encouraging or telling your wife how hot you think she is. Tell the ex there is a reason she is an ex and stay the...

Sufficient-Spray-986 − As someone who is overweight I say NTA. I feel embarrassed to even start that journey. It's very inspiring to see people put aside their shame and fear...

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A few encouraged direct communication with the daughter while validating the need to keep praising the wife.

Abstractteapot − If your child was young and struggling with her weight I'd understand. At the age of 20, she can do things to deal with her weight if it...

Unfortunately, it's true that most people do get judged negatively for being overweight by strangers. You can sit down and talk to your daughter and ask her why she feels...

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Actually ask for a reason, if she mentions weight or fat p__bia. Ask her why she thinks you acknowledging and cheering on someone who worked really hard is fat phobic.

Ask her to actually think about it critically, she's angry that you're celebrating your wife getting better and recovering from an accident and depression. Then tell her it has nothing...

But if she's feeling insecure when you do that, maybe you both need to explore why that is and what you can do so that she isn't seeing you praising...

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djroomba87 − I honestly don't think it matters who the a__hole is here. Your daughter clearly doesn't feel comfortable coming to talk to you about things, and that's an issue.

I think you need to gently sit down with your daughter and discuss what's bothering her. She's an adult, this stuff shouldn't be coming from your ex.

Make it clear to her that you support her 100% and that she can always talk to you about anything free from judgment.

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Others used analogies or direct logic to separate the wife’s praise from any judgment on others.

[Reddit User] − NTA Your wife has done alot of work to be healthy. Since your daughter has insecurities about being overweight,

then she needs to work on it by typical means: go get bloodwork, diet & exercise. Positive reinforcements should not be used on negative behaviors.

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Soft-Attention5699 − Remind your daughter that this is how healthy relationships flourish. Maybe she should try to have one.

MattTheCrow − This reminds me of that joke about the internet where someone posts "I really like apples" ,

and someone else comments "What the hell have you got against oranges, huh? " You didn't say anything about your daughter, it has nothing to do with her. NTA

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This family tension arises from genuine celebration of recovery clashing with inherited insecurities relayed through an ex-partner. The husband rightly continues supporting his wife’s transformation while the situation calls for separate, affirming conversations with his adult daughter about her own feelings.

How would you handle praising a partner’s health journey when it unintentionally highlights others’ struggles? Should compliments ever be toned down to protect someone else’s self-esteem, or is open encouragement always healthier in the long run?

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