Father Chooses To Keep Supporting His Mother-in-Law, But Refuses To Help His Pregnant Daughter

Family responsibilities can become complicated when multiple people need support at the same time. Sometimes there is no easy solution, but the hardest decisions are often the ones where someone feels like they are being forced to choose between loved ones.

The original poster (OP) is caught between caring for his aging mother-in-law and supporting his pregnant daughter. After his wife moved her mother into their home due to Alzheimer’s, their household became centered around caregiving.

When OP’s daughter later revealed her pregnancy and asked to move back home, he refused, explaining that they did not have the space or resources for another person to depend on them. Read on to see why this family disagreement became so emotional.

A father refused to let his pregnant daughter move home while his wife’s mother needed full-time care

Father Chooses to Keep Supporting His Mother-in-Law, But Refuses to Help His Pregnant Daughter
not the actual photo

'AITA for choosing my mother in law over my daughter?'

Firstly, I 55M have one daughter 20F who recently finished her sophomore year at a prestigious college on the opposite coast of the US.

For some previous context, during my daughter's freshman year of college, my mother in law

developed Alzheimer's and has progressively been more and more unable to take care of herself independently.

My wife, 32F, has asked me to consider moving her mother into our daughter's old bedroom to take better care of her.

After some deliberation, I decided to move her in while my daughter was halfway through her freshman year.

I had informed her at the time, and she did not have any issues with it.

Since then, the mother in law has become almost wholly dependent on me and my wife to care for her, which has been very stressful.

My wife insists on caring for her in our house though, because she is skeptical of the level of care and the cost burden at nursing homes.

However, recently my daughter informed me that she is pregnant from her boyfriend since freshman year.

Additionally, she has decided that she wants to keep the baby, which I have tried to be supportive of.

However, my daughter also requested that she be able to move back in with my wife

and I for the summer to consider what next steps she wants to pursue in terms of her career and education.

Although I want to support her to the best of my ability, my wife and I do not have room or money to support another dependent in our home.

When I requested she move in with her boyfriend's family, she informed me that they were not supportive of the pregnancy and urging her to abort it.

Ultimately, I told her that I cannot support her or her boyfriend and that they were adults

and needed to figure out how to deal with these issues if they were going to raise children together.

She got angry and said that I was not supporting her and my grandchild, to which I snapped

and told her I don't think she's responsible enough to raise a child if she cannot figure out how to support it without moving back in with me.

She called me cruel and has been refusing to talk to me ever since. So, AITA?

Few family conflicts are as emotionally complicated as moments when two people need support at the same time. Parents often want to believe they can always protect their children, but adulthood brings situations where resources, responsibilities, and difficult choices collide.

In this situation, the OP was not simply choosing one person over another. He was facing a painful conflict between caring for an aging parent figure with a serious illness and supporting his daughter during an unexpected life transition.

The emotional tension here comes from competing responsibilities rather than a simple question of who deserves help more. The OP and his wife have taken on a demanding caregiving role for his mother-in-law, whose Alzheimer’s has progressed to the point where she requires significant assistance.

That responsibility likely comes with exhaustion, financial pressure, and emotional strain. At the same time, his daughter’s request was not only about needing a place to stay.

For her, returning home may have represented safety, acceptance, and reassurance during a frightening moment after discovering she was pregnant. The painful part is that the OP appears to have focused primarily on the practical burden while his daughter was looking for emotional support and a sense that her family would stand beside her.

A useful psychological perspective comes from Dr. Pauline Boss, a researcher known for her work on ambiguous loss and family stress.

She explains that families experiencing prolonged uncertainty or caregiving situations often face emotional overload, where people may feel trapped between competing needs and limited resources.

Boss emphasizes that acknowledging emotional realities is essential because practical solutions alone do not address the feelings of fear, grief, or rejection that arise during major life changes.

This perspective helps explain why the conflict became so painful. The OP may be correct that he and his wife cannot realistically provide housing and financial support for another dependent. Setting limits does not automatically mean he does not love his daughter. However, the way those limits are communicated matters.

Telling his daughter that she is not responsible enough to become a parent because she needs support may have turned a practical boundary into a personal judgment. Many young adults facing unexpected pregnancies need guidance and stability, even if they are also responsible for making their own decisions.

The situation also highlights the importance of separating support from rescue. The OP cannot be expected to solve every problem for his adult daughter, especially while managing another major caregiving responsibility.

However, support can take many forms beyond providing a bedroom, such as helping her explore options, discussing finances, offering emotional reassurance, or finding temporary solutions together.

Ultimately, this situation is not simply about choosing his mother-in-law over his daughter. It is about a family reaching a point where everyone’s needs cannot be met in the same way. The challenge is finding a balance where boundaries exist without making someone feel abandoned. Practical limitations are real, but so is the emotional need for compassion during some of life’s most overwhelming moments.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These Redditors said OP’s main issue was not refusing housing but hurting his daughter by being unsupportive

Last_Level_251 − I don’t think you’re wrong for not having the space or finances to take in two more people.

That’s a valid concern. But this stopped being about your living situation the moment you told your daughter

she wasn’t responsible enough to be a parent because she asked her parents for help.

She’s 20, pregnant, still in college, and has nowhere else to go.

Asking for temporary support doesn’t automatically make someone irresponsible. If you truly can’t take her in, that’s one thing. But the way you spoke to her was unnecessarily harsh.

Anastriannnna − You should help your daughter. She's literally your child.

She's young and pregnant, she definitely needs her father's support.

And you're turning your back on her when she needs you. That's not fatherly behavior.

She deserves her parent's support and should have it. Suprise pregnancy happens to people, and your daughter's situation is nothing new.

But she didn't do anything wrong, and you're leaving her like a stranger. And no, you shouldn't kick your MIL out of the room.

It's good that you're helping her, and keep doing it. The elderly woman definitely needs help and care.

But you can't help your wife's mother but not your own daughter. That's seriously messed up priorities. She is literally your kid.

There is always a way, and at least for the summer break, you can turn the living room into a temporary room for your daughter.

Yes, it won't be easy. And it will probably be stressful. And it will probably be harder to live this way than it is now. But at least you'll help...

Seriously, you can use any space in the house temporarily (not permanently), and help your own child when she needs you so much.

During that time, your daughter would have a safe place and time to figure out what to do next.

If you continue to behave as you wrote in the post and you continue abandon your child in need,

don't be surprised if your daughter eventually gets her life together in the future,

but she won't contact you and you won't even meet your grandson or granddauhter She'll have a good reason. YTA

writingromance2 − What you're teaching your daughter is that you're no longer a safe place for her. While I

understand that you w already committed to caring for your MIL, you're and awful father for abandoning your daughter when she needs you.

Do better or you may find yourself a lonely old man who's daughter has learned you're not a safe space for her, so she stops letting you in her life.

This group believed the conflict was connected to deeper family issues, including grief, remarriage, and the daughter’s feelings of abandonment

Boggers111 − This is your daughter dude, she has already lost her mother.

You should be trying to figure it out instead of berating her.

If her mother was alive she’d be ashamed of you, way to put your new bedwarmer and her family ahead your own flesh and blood.

I’m sure there is a way to compromise to help all parties you seem very cold on your daughter I wonder why??

She wasn’t excited you replaced her mum with someone old enough to be her sister? ?

Oh well at least your wife is young enough to care for you when you reach that age I doubt your daughter or your grandchild will GAF. YTA.

Realistic_Pool_8087 − Info: how long after her mom died did you remarry someone 23 years younger than you?

I’m asking to gauge how much of your daughter’s upset is going to be residual about the fact that you

married someone so dramatically younger than yourself. How long have you been married?

Realistic_Pool_8087 − So from your daughter’s perspective you’re choosing midlife crisis/ trophy wife’s mom over her and her baby.

The age gap between you and your replacement wife is bigger than your daughter is old.

Not only that you’re financially supporting trophy wife’s mom more than you are her. I see why she’s not speaking to you.

She didn’t get to choose you as a father, her mom is dead and she’s all alone - now feeling abandoned by the only parent she has left.

Your duty is to your daughter FIRST and ALWAYS. YTA. Put MIL in a home and support your daughter.

If you don’t step up for her now she will NEVER forgive you for choosing your wife over her and her baby.

RegisterEither9711 − INFO: How long have you been with your wife and what is the relationship like between your daughter and wife?

I suspect that, for your daughter, this is about more than a place to stay.

These commenters argued OP should find a way to help his pregnant daughter because she is his responsibility

shrimpandshooflypie − Nothing would stop me trying to help my kid; I think you could try harder to find a way to be present for both her and MIL.

That being said…don’t expect a hand in your old age later if you don’t offer a hand now.

You are setting the example to not help her out when she’s struggling,

and she’s going to take that lesson to heart when it comes to your hard seasons, too.

RoboTwigs − YTA. That’s your kid and your grandkid. You didn’t plan to help your kid after university, in this economy?

Why didn’t mom-in-law plan better for her retirement and care?

Why does your wife feel the need to take that lack of planning and hold it against your daughter who is just trying to get a start in life?

Don’t be all pikachu shocked when you lose your family over this.

Mamapalooza − YTA. That's your kid, figure it out. I am a single mom getting no support but when my kid's friend needed a place to live,

I turned the dining room into a bedroom for her. Make it work. Your daughter needs her family.

Do you think the father made a reasonable decision, or should he have found another way to help his daughter? Share your thoughts below!