AITA for telling my husband I’m glad his mom d*ed before she could meet our baby?

IlyraShade 3625 comments

The original poster (OP) describes a long history of severe mistreatment from their husband's mother.

This mistreatment included verbal a**se, accusations of being a gold digger, intentional exclusion from family events for three years, and inappropriate actions regarding the husband's past relationships.

When the OP and her husband announced their pregnancy, the mother-in-law responded by demanding a DNA test, implying doubt about the child's paternity.

Following the mother-in-law's sudden death last year, the OP admits feeling intense relief rather than sadness.

Recently, after the husband expressed grief over his mother not meeting their four-month-old daughter, the OP reacted harshly, stating she was thankful the mother never got the chance to meet the baby because she would have been cruel to the child as she was to the OP, leading to an argument where the husband called the OP a "heartless b**ch."

AITA for telling my husband I’m glad his mom d*ed before she could meet our baby?
‘AITA for telling my husband I’m glad his mom d*ed before she could meet our baby?’

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A Wave of Opinions Just Hit the Thread:

Users didn’t stay quiet — they showed up in full force, mixing support with sharp criticism. From calling out bad behavior to offering real talk, the comments lit up fast.

The original poster is currently in a difficult emotional state, feeling justified in voicing a harsh truth about her deceased mother-in-law's toxic behavior, despite acknowledging that this truth may have caused significant pain during her husband's grieving process.

The central conflict lies between the OP's deeply felt need to validate her past suffering and the expectation that one should be respectful or forgiving towards the deceased, especially when their surviving partner is grieving.

The question remains whether the OP was justified in speaking such a blunt truth in that moment, potentially prioritizing her own emotional honesty over her husband's delicate state of grief, or if her response was an unnecessarily cruel act that damaged the marital relationship.

Should the immediate pain of the survivor take precedence over the reality of the deceased's past actions?