AITAH For not alowing 2 of my 3 children to vist thier mum after she refused to see my middle daughter?
A father is refusing to let two of his three daughters visit their mother over Christmas after she deliberately excluded their 14-year-old middle sister from holiday plans and gifts. Months earlier, the 14-year-old reported unsafe living conditions in her mother’s home to social services, leading to a temporary restriction on overnight stays there. The mother has now had her house approved as safe again, but she refuses to see or gift the daughter who “told the truth,” punishing her for the report.
The father believes allowing the other two girls (15 and 12) to receive gifts and return home would only deepen the hurt and reward the mother’s targeted emotional abuse. What makes the situation more complicated is the mother’s ongoing refusal to engage with the 14-year-old while expecting normal visitation with the others. The father sees this as manipulative retaliation and worries it will cause lasting damage to all three siblings if the exclusion continues unchecked.

‘AITAH For not alowing 2 of my 3 children to vist thier mum after she refused to see my middle daughter?’
The trouble began when the 14-year-old daughter reported dangerous conditions at her mother’s home.


The mother responded by refusing to see or include the middle daughter in any plans.

The father decided to keep all three daughters home to protect the excluded child from further harm.



The 14-year-old acted responsibly by documenting and reporting unsafe conditions, prompting social services intervention that protected all three siblings. The mother’s response—excluding and withholding affection/gifts from the child who spoke up—constitutes classic retaliation and emotional manipulation. Child psychologists and family court experts view this behavior as a form of alienation and abuse: it teaches children that honesty about unsafe situations will be met with punishment, potentially discouraging future reporting.
The father’s decision to keep all three daughters home prevents immediate reinforcement of that message and shields the targeted child from witnessing siblings being rewarded while she is ostracized. From another perspective, some might argue the mother has now corrected the housing issue and deserves visitation rights with the willing children. They could see the father’s blanket refusal as overreach or alienation on his part.
However, allowing selective inclusion while one child remains punished risks fracturing sibling bonds and normalizing conditional love. On a broader scale, these dynamics highlight how unresolved parental conflict can turn children into pawns, with lasting psychological consequences unless courts or therapy intervene to enforce healthy boundaries and accountability.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
Most users strongly supported the father’s protective stance, condemning the mother’s punitive behavior toward the daughter who reported the unsafe home.

















Several comments urged legal action and therapy while emphasizing the seriousness of the retaliation.



A few voices offered balanced advice, suggesting consultation with the children and caution around legal visitation rights.








The father is prioritizing emotional safety by keeping all three daughters home for Christmas, refusing to let the mother’s targeted punishment of the 14-year-old go unchallenged. The mother’s refusal to engage with the child who reported unsafe conditions—while offering gifts and time to the others—appears designed to isolate and silence her, a tactic that risks long-term harm to sibling relationships and trust in authority figures. Documenting everything and seeking professional guidance may be the next step to protect all the children.
How would you handle a situation where one parent punishes a child for reporting legitimate safety concerns? Should the other siblings be allowed normal visitation if it means rewarding the punishing behavior? Do you think involving courts or therapy early is the best way forward, or should the father wait and see? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
