AITA For not wanting a guy included in our mom friend group?

What happens when your trusted circle of fellow parents fractures over an unexpected addition that stirs old fears? A single mom of two navigates that painful shift as a solo dad enters the daycare fold, seeking playdate ties that clash with her therapy-processed trauma. Her social media vent unravels the ensuing divide, transforming camaraderie into conflict.

The rift widens as half the group backs her unease around unknown men, rooted in ex-related scars she’s unpacking in therapy, while others decry exclusion as outdated bias. Kids bear the brunt—her five-year-old left out of fun, mirroring the dad’s sidelining she feared. This narrative captures the delicate dance of community versus comfort, pondering if personal safety nets should stretch to include everyone or snap back to protect the vulnerable.

This image is not real, it was generated by AI to depict the situation of the story.

‘AITA For not wanting a guy included in our mom friend group?’

The single mom shares her lifeline in motherhood, a tight-knit circle born from daycare days that cushions her solo journey.

I (35F) am a single mother to 2 kids (5 & 3). Both my kids are in daycare and over the years I have built a solid friend group with...

The father of my kids is not in the picture at all and my relationship with him is non-existent. This is 100% for the best and I am currently in...

New faces at drop-off spark cautious chats, her instincts on guard from hard-learned lessons.

A few months ago, there were 2 new kids that started at our daycare center. They are similar in age to my kids and were placed in the same classes...

He would try to make small talk with me a few times, but I am uncomfortable around strange men so I would be polite, but not engage further than that.

The group chat pivot catches her off-balance, thrusting an outsider into her safe space without warning.

Our mom group has a group chat that we use to support each other and arrange play dates. A few weeks ago, one of the moms texted the group chat...

I privately texted that other mom and told her that I don't feel comfortable with a man I don't know having my contact information and told her that she should...

I then texted the rest of the moms and told them that I want them to keep a separate group chat without the other dad because I don't know him...

Backlash brews, fracturing alliances and flipping support into scrutiny.

This resulted in a lot of divided opinions with about half of the moms agreeing to a separate chat and the other half saying that would be too difficult to...

The mom I texted privately replied to me that she has talked with this dad numerous times and that he seems like a nice person and good parent and that...

She told me I am being difficult and making this all harder than it needs to be. The other day when I picked up my kids, my 5-year-old was upset...

I texted the moms about it and they said that they were getting the kids together with the new dad and didn't invite my kids because of how I was...

I told them it was rude to exclude my kids like that and a couple of the moms told me to grow up because that's exactly what I was trying...

I'm at a loss because these moms have been so supportive to me in the past and as soon as this dad comes into the picture it's like they pulled...

The crux of this divide rests on clashing priorities: the poster’s trauma-fueled caution versus the group’s push for inclusivity, splintering a vital support web over one dad’s entry. Hurt compounds as her boundary request—sparing her from unknown men’s contacts—morphs into perceived control, leading to retaliatory exclusions that wound her child. Emotions swirl around safety and fairness; her unease, valid from ex-inflicted scars, collides with others’ equity drive, eroding trust when past solidarity sours into standoffs.

Her discomfort signals hypervigilance, a therapy-addressed response where strange men echo threats, prompting withdrawal to shield her kids—yet demanding separate chats risks isolation, amplifying fears of abandonment. The adding mom, sensing no red flags, champions the dad’s parental bid, viewing resistance as bias that harms innocent children; this defensiveness overlooks her bid for consultation, breeding resentment. Half the group’s split reveals unspoken norms: trauma empathy bows to anti-exclusion ideals, fracturing bonds when individual needs challenge collective harmony.

Therapist Esther Perel, expert in relational dynamics, observes that “boundaries protect us, but imposed on others, they become walls—true safety blooms from choice, not coercion, allowing groups to evolve without erasure.” Here, the poster’s ask veers toward mandate, echoing control she fled in her ex; Perel’s insight urges reframing unease as personal opt-out, preserving the core group’s empathy while letting allies bridge gaps. It highlights how unvetted adds erode vulnerability, yet rigid lines alienate, needing navigation through shared values.

To mend, host a neutral coffee huddle with therapy-honed scripts: “My past makes this tough; I need space but value our circle—how can we adapt without splits?” Propose dad-free subgroups for sensitive shares, while encouraging vetted intros via group votes. She might trial low-stakes dad chats in public, building tolerance gradually, and lean on her allied half for kid-focused hangs. These bridges honor her healing, fostering a hybrid network where safety and solidarity coexist, turning division into deeper resilience.

Check out how the community responded:

Online voices mostly skewered the original poster’s push for separation as overreach, labeling it hypocritical exclusion while validating her trauma—yet urging her to own the fallout on her kids. Threads teemed with single-dad defenses, calls for therapy-led growth, and jabs at gender bias, with a minority echoing her boundary rights sans mandates. The exchange sparked broader chats on parent group inclusivity, underscoring how one person’s shield can feel like another’s sword.

A chorus condemned the control angle, flipping her exclusion bid back as the real rudeness, while nodding to her valid unease.

Vivacious-Hiccup − You aren’t the bad guy for not wanting your personal contact information shared with a person you do not know (regardless of gender)

or for not wanting to participate in activities where people you don’t know are present. This is a boundary you are welcome to set but you do not get to...

Those who criticized you for setting this boundary were wrong but it sounds like they ultimately respected it by NOT inviting you to an event where the dad would be...

Trying to exclude anyone else for any reason (when it’s not a group consensus) makes you the A H here. Set your boundaries and enforce them but remember boundaries do...

“I will not be participating in activities or group chats where men I don’t know are present” is perfectly acceptable and enforceable. “I don’t want men I don’t know in...

Don’t get upset when people respect your boundaries because what you really wanted was for them to pick you over someone else. YTA

BulbasaurRanch − Yeah, YTA You can’t try and exclude him and then complain that it was turned around back to you. You get what you give. It’s obviously a “parents...

He’s looking out for his kids and wants to have social contacts for them. You tried to bully your way into excluding him. He’s done nothing to you. He doesn’t...

Your traumas are your own to deal with, not force others to accommodate your selfish wants. You are being unreasonable. You are being difficult. Now your kids are facing the...

Sun_Sea_and_Sony − YTA: And quite frankly, well done to the other mums not caving in to pressure from you to exclude another single parent trying to do the best for...

As women, we have suffered with discrimination for centuries and felt firsthand how difficult life can be when you're not taken seriously in a role simply because of your gender.

Now you want to exclude a fellow parent (and his innocent child) simply because he is a dad when he seems to have given no reason for you to distrust...

Meanwhile, you're actively trying to exclude a father who is making an effort to socialize his child and build friendships. I am sorry you're dealing with past trauma,

but if you don't feel comfortable communicating with him, that does not give you the right to try to force others to exclude him and his child. Dads deserve an...

It's up to you to step back if that is what's best for you. But you need to accept the repercussions that will have on your children.

squashed_tomato − I told them it was rude to exclude my kids like that I'm sorry this just made me laugh. I get not wanting to give your number out...

Treat it the same as an internet forum because you have about as much control over what people do with your information.

Nothing is private if you put it on there regardless of whether a man is in the group or not. See it from his point of view. He knows he...

Why shouldn't he be able to make connections with the parents of children in his child's class. Why should his kids miss out just because he's a single dad and...

Deeper dives unpacked hypocrisy and societal shifts, urging empathy for the dad while prodding her toward healing.

aphrahannah − I then texted the rest of the moms and told them that I want them to keep a separate group chat without the other dad I texted the...

I told them it was rude to exclude my kids like that and a couple of the moms told me to grow up because that's exactly what I was trying...

You asked them to make a group chat without you. Them setting up playdates was the point of the group. Did you think they just wouldn't make the second group...

What other outcome could you possibly have expected, other than playdates that you excluded your children from, by choosing not join the second groupchat? !

zoso1219 − YTA. You called him a “strange man”, when you have barely had a conversation with him and have not pointed out anything to warrant him as “strange”, which...

And the other moms are correct, you’re being hypocritical to want to exclude him and his kids from conversations and playdates but then get upset when the same happens to...

Could you imagine if you and your children were excluded from the group because you did not fit the “normal family type” (not married to the father of your children)?...

Now imagine how he feels, being excluded just because he is a man and is present in his children’s lives. Do better, OP. If you don’t, it will most likely...

RLS2023 − YTA many kids have single dads or stay at home dads - why should these men be excluded from groups that support single or stay at home parents...

Would you invite his kids to a party for yours? You'd need to share your contact info and be willing to have a chat with him. Your attitude actually marginalises...

So you want your kids to be invited - if they were, when you show up would you chat with the dad? No or minimally so yes you will be...

Little_demon333 − YTA, whatever "trauma" you're dealing with is not that mans fault. You're projecting and punishing him for something you need to deal with.

If you don't want to associate with him that's fine, but you somehow still make yourself the victim when they respect your decision and create a whole new group with...

Snappier takes hammered the irony, with final calls for growth over grudges.

rLaw-hates-jews3 − The other day when I picked up my kids, my 5-year-old was upset because a bunch of his friends were talking about a playdate that he wasn't invited...

I texted the moms about it and they said that they were getting the kids together with the new dad and didn't invite my kids because of how I was...

I told them it was rude to exclude my kids like that and a couple of the moms told me to grow up because that's exactly what I was trying...

I'm at a loss because these moms have been so supportive to me in the past and as soon as this dad comes into the picture it's like they pulled...

You just found out that you're not special. I'm sure that was awkward, but you asked for this. You wanted a separate group chat without the father, and you got...

I-Own-Blackacre − YTA. You are specifically trying to exclude another parent and his children purely on the basis of gender. I am very sorry that your ex victimized you, which...

Much better to deal with your own trauma with your therapist. The world around you should not be expected to change from what is otherwise completely normal in order to...

blavek − YTA and here is why. This group is not about your trauma. If you want a support group, find a support group. This group is for parents to...

They might tell you to pursue at least an aquaintance with him. Second, You haven't made any attempt to get a read on this father because you are insecure around...

Well he's not strange he is a parent of kids in your class and I hate to break the news to you, but almost half the parents of the kids...

You will be very lucky in my opinion if this group invites you back at all after your behavior. They may do it just so your kids aren't left and...

Then there are two fathers to choose both would be "Strange" to you as you haven't met them. What makes women joining the group safer than a man joining the...

Also, what do you do when a mother shows up with the father of the child at events? I am not going to pretend that it is entirely impossible for...

[Reddit User] − Yta, you said you didn’t want to be in the same group with him so now you are free to form your own group of your own...

You do have to live with the repercussions of your own actions, being excluded and having your children excluded from opportunities because you are willing to exclude others.

PlumpPamela − YTA. The core purpose of the group seems to be to support one another as parents and to facilitate socializing for the kids.

Excluding someone based solely on their gender doesn't align with the inclusive spirit of community parenting. Instead of gatekeeping, perhaps embrace this opportunity to show your children a powerful lesson...

While your discomfort is valid and deserves attention, it should not dictate the dynamics of a group meant to serve the collective needs of parents and their children, not just...

Creepy_Minimum666 − " I told them it was rude to exclude my kids like that and a couple of the moms told me to grow up because that's exactly what...

MoralHazardFunction − I told them it was rude to exclude my kids like that and a couple of the moms told me to grow up because that's exactly what I...

This tangle teaches a bittersweet lesson: safe spaces thrive on mutual grace, but stretching to include all can strain the seams, especially when old hurts lurk. The poster’s quest for comfort, while rooted in real recovery, underscores how boundaries shine when self-contained—pushing them outward risks the very isolation feared, yet her story spotlights the power of therapy in reclaiming agency amid group shifts. It nudges us toward hybrid havens, where core allies anchor and gradual bridges build broader belonging.

Would you bow out of a treasured circle to honor your limits, or advocate for tweaks that test ties? How has trauma reshaped your parent pals—what inclusion felt like a win?

Leave a Reply

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