AITAH for moving out of my dad’s house and telling him I want nothing more to do with his wife?

A 16-year-old boy lost his mother at 10 and cherished an antique music box she gave him as a keepsake. When his dad remarried two years ago, the boy and his stepmom got along okay — until she secretly took the music box from his room and sold it online for $2,000 to pay for medicine for her own newborn child. When confronted, she defended her actions, saying the baby needed it more.

Heartbroken and furious, the boy called her a thief and “dead to him,” packed his things, and moved out to his grandparents’ house. His dad wants him to apologize and come home, saying he overreacted and owes his stepmom an apology. The boy refuses and wants nothing to do with her. Is he the asshole for cutting her off?

‘AITAH for moving out of my dad’s house and telling him I want nothing more to do with his wife?’

The boy lost his mother and kept her music box as a treasured memory:

My dad's not happy about any of this btw but the biggest fight is over the stuff I said to and about his wife and the fact I just left...

My mom died when I (M16) was 10. She had this antique music box that she gave to me before she got too sick. It meant a lot to her...

It was always in my room and I didn't listen to it a lot but just looking at it reminded me of her because she used to dance to the...

My dad remarried 2 years ago and his wife and I got along fine for the most part. It was sorta tense because she thought I'd want a motherly figure...

She built it all up in her head and she struggled when that wasn't what I wanted. We kinda figured it out but didn't get close and then her and...

The theft and confrontation:

Then a couple of weeks ago I got home from school and the music box was missing from my room. When I asked her if she'd seen it she lied...

He asked me if I moved it without realizing and I said no. I tore my room up looking for it and I searched other rooms in the house. No...

ADVERTISEMENT

She said someone bought it off ebay for 2k or something and she waited until she was sending it out to take it because she thought I wouldn't notice immediately....

My dad told me to calm down and that we could talk it out. His wife said I needed to understand that my half sibling needed medicine they couldn't afford...

She said there was no other way. I told her she had no right and it was mom's before and mine now and she was a thief. She defended her...

ADVERTISEMENT

I told her she better get it back and she said she couldn't and wouldn't. So I called her a disgusting POS and I told her she was dead to...

My dad was still trying to calm us both down. I packed up my stuff and texted my grandpa to come pick me up. My dad's wife started yelling at...

Dad was like sleep it off and we'll talk in the morning and when grandpa pulled up he tried to stop me leaving. I said I wasn't spending the night...

ADVERTISEMENT

The ongoing conflict:

My dad has tried to get me to go back home ever since. He told me we need to talk about it as a family and I said there is...

and I used all the insults I did that night and some more. He told me not to say those things and I need to find a way to forgive....

ADVERTISEMENT

He said he's going to fight my grandparents and he'll press charges if and when he can. I said I'll sleep under a bridge, I'll sleep in a shelter or...

He said I don't need to overreact like this and I owe her an apology too because treating someone like I treated her and talking about her like I am...

And he said I can't run away when I don't like what happens. I told him mom's music box is gone because of the (insult) he married which pissed my...

ADVERTISEMENT

Stealing a child’s personal property — especially a cherished heirloom from a deceased parent — is a serious betrayal of trust and can cause deep emotional harm. The stepmom’s justification (needing money for her own child) does not excuse taking something that wasn’t hers. The boy’s reaction — anger, insults, and leaving — is understandable for a grieving teen whose boundaries were violated.

At 16, he has the right to choose where he lives (many states allow teens to petition for emancipation or live with relatives). His dad’s threats of “pressing charges” are likely empty, as the boy is not a runaway minor in danger. The stepmom’s actions could constitute theft, and the boy has a strong case for small claims court or police involvement if he wants to pursue it.

According to child psychologist Dr. Laura Markham, “When a stepparent violates a child’s personal space or belongings, it can feel like an attack on their identity and connection to the deceased parent. The child’s anger is protective, not disrespectful.” (Source: her work on stepfamily grief and boundaries.)

ADVERTISEMENT

The boy should continue living with his grandparents and seek therapy to process his grief and anger. His dad needs to hold his wife accountable and rebuild trust with his son — not pressure the boy to forgive or apologize.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

The Reddit community overwhelmingly supported the OP (NTA), calling the stepmom a thief and urging him to press charges or file a police report. People praised his decision to leave and stand his ground.

Most called the stepmom’s actions theft and urged legal action:

ADVERTISEMENT

Hopeful-Artichoke449 − Stay where you are. If they "couldn't afford" meds then they can't afford court costs. Ask your grandparents to help you file a police report.

Fatherofthecentury13 − It was YOUR property. And selling for 2k makes it grand theft. YOU can press charges.

Hopeful-Artichoke449 − Did they sell their wedding rings or her jewelry or her car? No? She only stole from you? ? Shocker.

ADVERTISEMENT

RandiLynn1982 − If they can’t afford medicine they can’t afford a lawyer also, have you thought about reporting her to the police for stealing?

Beautiful_Delivery77 − NTA - She immediately sold the one thing of monetary value NOT belonging to her when she needed money. Tell your father you’ll press charges if he doesn’t...

Altruistic_Ladder_19 − If he starts again with the pressing charges tell him you will as well, on his wife for stealing a family heirloom and selling it. Also go on...

ADVERTISEMENT

MoodOk4607 − NTA. Pretty sure $2k is grand theft. Call the cops. She owes you an apology and $2k but, you won’t get that so jail seems perfect. Press charges.

FrontTour1583 − Nta. Can you file a police report for her stealing your personal property? I would look into that and try to press charges...

Many expressed anger at the dad’s defense of his wife and sympathy for the boy:

ADVERTISEMENT

EntrepreneurMost1594 − File charges in her that was your property... She is a pos. She put the family she made with your father before you... You seem like a good...

StellalunaStarr − File a police report!!!!!!

Hopeful-Artichoke449 − Also, Don't let your dad guilt trip you for one second. A normal person would leave this person immediately... your Dad is choosing his d__k.

ADVERTISEMENT

InfernalKaneki − NTA Your dad threatened charges? Well, now is your time to actually do that yourself. Press charges against your dads wife... Your dad is insane for defending his...

LegitimateMusician59 − She stole from you, something in your own room from your deceased mother. See if you can go to the local police.

ADVERTISEMENT

FeauxGinger − Updateme File charges. You have her admission of it, id 100% call the cops...

S0rryU − Does she have a wedding ring? Other jeweleries? A TV?... she is a thief. Please follow the advice I've seen in other comments and file a police report....

This story is heartbreaking — a grieving teen lost the last tangible connection to his mother when his stepmom stole and sold it without remorse. His anger and decision to leave are completely understandable; no one should have to live with someone who violated their trust and memories so callously. The dad’s defense of his wife and threats to force him back are deeply misguided.

ADVERTISEMENT

The boy should stay with his grandparents, report the theft to police, and protect himself legally and emotionally. What do you think? Was he right to leave and cut her off, or should he have tried to talk it out? Have you ever lost a cherished item from a deceased parent? Share your thoughts below!

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

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