Mom Calls Daughter “Disgusting” For Letting Child See Homophobic Family, Then Tells Ex And Sparks Custody Drama

When emotions run high after a messy breakup, decisions don’t always stay simple. This mother discovered that her daughter had been secretly allowing her child to spend time with the father’s family, the same family that had rejected him for being gay. To her, it felt like a betrayal not just of her ex, but of basic values.

She confronted her daughter, and when that didn’t resolve things, she told the child’s father directly. Now the situation has spiraled. Her daughter is furious, and custody arrangements have become stricter as a result.

What she believed was the right thing to do has caused deeper conflict. Was she justified in stepping in, or did she overstep in a situation that wasn’t entirely hers to control? Read on to find out.

A parent exposes their daughter for secretly taking a child to the father’s estranged family

Mom Calls Daughter “Disgusting” For Letting Child See Homophobic Family, Then Tells Ex And Sparks Custody Drama
not the actual photo

'AITA for telling my daughter I am disgusted by her and telling her ex she has been taking their kid to his family side?'

My daughter and Ryan (her ex) are 26 now. When they were both 18, my daughter got pregnant.

They got an apartment together and started to raise there little family.

They never got married, but Ryans family pressured them to do it often.

Multiple time I heard them say, those two need to stop living in sin.

The issue was a year ago, when Ryan was caught cheating, and he is gay.

The breakup was extremely messy, and in the end, the custody was 50/50.

Ryan's family is really religious and when it came out, they were breaking, they were pissed.

When they learned Ryan was gay, they disowned him.

I was at my daughter's place helping her move out when I heard Ryan's mother call him a faggot. So his family is really s__tty people.

After he was disowned, for some reason, they thought he would give them access to the grandbaby, he basically told them to shove it.

I know about this because they contacted me once to let them see the kid while I was babysitting. I told them no.

50/50 has been a bit rough for my daughter; it is hard for her not to have her kid for major events.

Example Ryan had custody of the grandbaby during Easter

but he agreed to let my daughter have him that day so they can celebrate with my side of the family.

My daughter was over to pick up some stuff and she showed me pictures from her latest weekend trip.

In the picture, their was Ryans mom and his two siblings.

I asked what this was about and she told me that she has been taking the kid to see them for a few months now.

I asked if Ryan knew (I thought they got back in contact), and she told me no. I told her that it was horrible to do.

That they are bigots and disowned their kid. She got defensive, and it went into an argument.

She defended taking her kids around homophobes, and I told her I was disgusted by what she was doing.

I inform Ryan, he thanked me and now my daughter super pissed.

Ryan apparently is refusing to be lenient anymore with custody.

So more getting the kid on not her day even if my daughter wants them for some event

There are moments when doing the “right thing” feels like betraying someone you love. That tension sits at the heart of many family conflicts, especially when a child’s well-being is involved. What hurts most is not always the disagreement itself, but the realization that values no longer align.

In this situation, the parent wasn’t simply reacting to a bad decision. They were responding to what felt like a serious moral breach. From their perspective, the daughter knowingly exposed her child to people who had rejected and insulted their own son in a deeply harmful way.

That creates a strong emotional reaction, rooted in protection and fairness. At the same time, the daughter’s actions likely come from a different emotional place. Losing time with a child can create a powerful urge to rebuild connections or fill emotional gaps.

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What looks reckless to one person may feel like restoring balance to another. This clash is less about custody logistics and more about conflicting beliefs on what keeps a child safe.

A more nuanced view shows that both sides are reacting to loss and control. The daughter lost stability and shared parenting ease, which may push her toward expanding family ties, even flawed ones. The parent, however, is focused on the moral environment surrounding the child.

Research shows that children are highly sensitive to social cues and attitudes around them, even when those attitudes are not directly aimed at them. In fact, studies highlight that children begin absorbing social biases at a very young age, often before they fully understand them.

This concern is not exaggerated. According to the American Psychological Association, children learn about bias and discrimination early, and exposure to these attitudes can shape how they understand fairness, identity, and belonging.

In addition, UNICEF reports that discrimination in childhood can act as a chronic source of stress, affecting mental health and emotional development over time.

These insights explain why the parent reacted so strongly. The issue was never just about visits. It was about the kind of environment shaping the child’s worldview.

Still, calling the daughter “disgusting” shifted the conversation away from concern and into conflict. When emotions escalate to that level, even valid points lose their impact.

A grounded way forward focuses less on blame and more on structure. Clear, agreed-upon boundaries between both parents regarding who the child can be around would prevent situations like this from escalating again.

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At the same time, rebuilding trust between parent and daughter will likely require separating judgment from intention.

Sometimes the hardest reality to face is this: two people can both believe they are protecting the same child, while pulling in completely opposite directions.

See what others had to share with OP:

These Redditors backed OP, saying the daughter broke trust by crossing clear boundaries

goldietheswagbear − Doing s__t like that behind someone's back is not okay, even if the family weren't h__ophobic. You did the right thing.

GTS_84 − NTA. He set a boundary and your daughter violated it. Simple as that.

And she knows it was the wrong thing to do because otherwise she would have told him months ago.

If it was okay to do she wouldn't have hidden it from him.

She knew it was wrong and now she is facing the inevitable and obvious consequences.

Celestial_Duckie − NTA. If she felt that fostering a positive relationship between her kid and ex-in-laws was a good idea,

she should have been upfront about it.

Instead, she knew it would upset her ex and she hid it because he wouldn't be happy about it.

His family disowned him; I would not trust them to not try to turn his child against him.

Thank you for standing up for him 💙

This group stressed the child shouldn’t be around harmful, toxic grandparents

jeffweet − I’m generally a big fan of MYOB but in this case your daughter not only stepped out of bounds with Ryan,

but why would she want her kid around such awful people. NTA

thefoxandmoon − NTA. Regardless of what kind of partner he was,

he is the dad and people who treat him like that should not be around his kids.

Disgusting. Good for you for calling it out.

Emily-Persephone − These people ditched their own son when he didn't meet their standards.

They'll do the same to their grandkids. She's giving them the opportunity to hurt the grandkids.

The father absolutely needed to know this. Bigots don't deserve to know their grandkids.

These commenters suggested the daughter acted out of spite or unresolved emotions

Far-Season-695 − NTA methinks your daughter wanted to get back at Ryan for the cheating

Meewelyne − NTA, I think your daughter is a bigot too, probably out of spite.

What her ex did is bad, but honestly I would give him some grace

since he lived with such parents who probably made him reprime himself to death.

This group said everyone shares blame, citing cheating, bigotry, and interference

artificialwinter − ESH. Ryan for betraying your daughter on a very fundamental level.

His parents for being bigots. Your daughter for letting known bigots be around her kid and you for interfering

and taking Ryan’s side over your own daughter. He lied and cheated and made a fool of her.

I know, I know, he was raised in a religious, intolerant household, couldn’t be open about his sexuality, etc etc.

But he was in control of his choices and he made bad ones.

And you took his side, reached out when your daughter was no contact. This is how YOU end up on the no contact list.

If that happens, will you be just as righteous when Ryan brings the grandbaby to YOUR house behind her back?

Lithogiraffe − ESH you (siding with the cheater), the daughter (siding with homophobes), Ryan (for cheating)

malibuklw − ESH. Ryan cheated on your daughter, lied to her for years, and you are putting him ahead of everyone else.

Ryan’s parents suck. Your daughter should have thought better than to bring her child around bigots but it’s clear she wasn’t raised right.

SmallWorldHuh − ESH. The parents (homophobes), Ryan (cheater and liar for years),

daughter (engaging with homophobes behind Ryan’s back),

and you (meddling in business that is not your own and prioritizing a cheater over your daughter).

None of you are good people from this post alone

These Redditors strongly condemned the daughter’s actions and supported legal consequences

HilariousSwiftie − NTA! Ryan should probably try to see if he can amend their custody agreement to bar his kids from being around his parents.

GreekAmericanDom − NTA What your daughter is doing is absolutely wrong and vile. She needed to hear that.

Proud-Geek1019 − NTA. I wonder if your daughter is using his family to help watch the child?

But regardless, if their son says no contact, she has no right to go around that. She can absolutely be taken to court over this.

So what matters more in situations like this, protecting principles or preserving relationships? Should the truth always come first, even if it causes damage? And when co-parenting lines are crossed, who has the right to step in? Share your thoughts below!

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