Dad Won’t Break Son’s Heart By Rehoming Dog, Even As Pregnant Wife Calls Him Selfish

Pregnancy can change the atmosphere of a home in ways no one expects. Excitement, nerves, and a thousand tiny fears tend to surface all at once. Sometimes those fears are easy to soothe. Other times, they collide with something deeply rooted in the family dynamic.

This dad is caught between his pregnant wife and his teenage son’s beloved dog, a gentle giant who has been part of their lives for years. His wife says her anxiety around the dog is putting her health and the baby at risk. He insists the dog has never shown a single sign of aggression and refuses to re-home him.

Now she feels unsupported, and he feels cornered. Scroll down to see how this family conflict unfolded.

A father refuses to rehome his son’s beloved dog, despite his pregnant wife’s growing fears

Dad Won’t Break Son’s Heart By Rehoming Dog, Even As Pregnant Wife Calls Him Selfish
not the actual photo

AITA for prioritizing my son's dog over my wife's pregnancy?

When my son (14) was eight, we got a dog.

He's half Great Dane and half some dog my friend's dog met during an unauthorized absence.

My son loves this dog and does all the care for him (except vet stuff) and is a very responsible dog owner.

This dog is pretty much his best friend.

My wife is 12 weeks pregnant, and ever since we confirmed the pregnancy,

she has been acting weird around the dog. She avoids him, puts her hands over her stomach when he is around

and jolts whenever he makes a noise. Today she told me she wants to re-home the dog.

I asked her what she was talking about.

She said she has been having anxiety that he will jump on her. This is completely unreasonable.

He doesn't jump on people. We trained him not to jump on people or run into people very young

because he is half Great Dane and I felt this was important for all dogs,

but especially one who could possibly grow to such a large size (which he did).

There is no reason for her to think the dog will jump on her.

She said that there is no way to know for sure that the dog won't jump on her,

and if he does, our baby could be hurt. This dog has never so much as growled at her.

She said even if the dog doesn't jump on her, her anxiety about it is bad for her health.

She said she needs the dog elsewhere for her safety and the baby's.

I told her that there was no way. My son got this dog right after he lost his mom and I imprinted on him hard.

Sometimes I think he loves the dog more than me! I'm not taking his dog. The dog didn't do anything!

My wife said I am prioritizing the dog over her pregnancy. The dog isn't a threat to her pregnancy.

If this were any other unreasonable request, I would just do it because she is pregnant.

I just can't break my son's heart over a fear she has that makes no sense. Am I being an a__hole?

Fear doesn’t always respond to logic. Especially during pregnancy, the body can react before the mind has time to reason. In this family’s conflict, what looks like a debate about a dog is actually a collision between grief, protection, and anxiety.

From the husband’s perspective, the dog represents far more than a pet. His 14-year-old son bonded deeply with the animal after losing his mother. That bond likely became a stabilizing force during grief, something steady when everything else felt uncertain.

Removing the dog now could feel, to the boy, like another loss he didn’t choose. To the wife, however, pregnancy has amplified her instinct to guard her body and unborn child. Even if the dog has never jumped or shown aggression, her anxiety feels real and physical.

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When she covers her stomach or startles at a noise, that isn’t theatrics; it’s a nervous system on high alert. Both adults are acting out of love. They’re just protecting different vulnerabilities.

Many readers may instinctively side with the husband because the dog has done nothing wrong. But pregnancy anxiety is not uncommon, nor is it purely “irrational.” According to experts cited in Psychology Today, between 15–25% of pregnant individuals experience significant anxiety symptoms, often marked by heightened threat perception and persistent “what if” fears.

Research published in BMC Psychology further explains that prenatal anxiety is associated with hormonal shifts and increased stress sensitivity, which can intensify protective instincts even when objective risk is low.

In other words, her fear may not be about this specific dog; it may be about the overwhelming responsibility of safeguarding a new life.

Seen through that lens, the wife’s request isn’t necessarily an attack on the son’s bond. It may be a plea for relief from constant internal alarm. At the same time, the husband’s refusal isn’t cruelty toward his pregnant partner; it reflects his awareness that his son has already endured profound loss.

Teenagers who experience parental death can form especially intense attachments to companion animals, which serve as emotional anchors.

The real issue may not be choosing between dog and pregnancy, but finding ways to reduce anxiety without creating new trauma.

Professional dog behavior assessments, refresher obedience training, structured boundaries in the home, or even individual counseling for prenatal anxiety could provide reassurance without uprooting the son’s support system.

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Sometimes the healthiest solution isn’t removing what we fear; it’s strengthening the support around it.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These Redditors backed OP and opposed rehoming the dog

papa_pockets − I would microchip the dog, if you haven’t already.

Make sure info is up to date, and see if she will seek counseling/compromise. Your kid needs his dog.

NTA. Edit: jeez thanks for the awards, y’all

MistressLiliana − NTA. Animals are lifetime responsibilities.

Pawning them off because she got pregnant would be a s__tty thing to do.

TeeKaye28 − NTA. And make sure the dog is microchipped. Just in case the dog “gets out, accidentally.”

irate_anatid − NTA, but your title is wrong. You’re prioritizing your son over your pregnant wife’s irrational fear.

I think it might smooth things over if you’re open to considering reasonable measures to allay her fears, though.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Assuming what you’ve said is true and the dog doesn’t jump on people.

Is she also going to quit driving? Quit walking up stairs? Or walking at all? Or leaving the house at all?

Being alive at all is an inherent risk, and all sorts of mundane things are also a potential risk.

(I’m a woman. I’ve had a kid).

If her anxiety is that bad, she should look into ways for her to manage it.

Independent-Self8210 − NTA. That dog is family. You’re not prioritizing anything, you’re just being reasonable.

If you give that dog up your son will hate you, and rightfully so.

Sea-Confection-2627 − NTA Perhaps your wife needs therapy for this anxiety issue.

She should talk to her doctor, who should be able to refer her to a therapist.

The doctor might also be able to calm her fears somewhat by explaining what injuries might be inflicted

if the dog jumps on her. You might also tell your wife that you'd rather re-home her than the dog.

Maybe that will get her to come to her senses.

nottelling411 − She says there's no way to know the dog won't jump on her.

There's no way to know a tree won't fall on her. Or if she'll be attacked by a rabid raccoon.

All of these scenarios are possible- but unlikely. It's understandable that she's anxious and protective right now.

But she can't live in a bubble.

It's unlikely the dog will jump on her but it's almost certain she'll forever damage her relationship with your son

if she rehomes the dog. Also, getting rid of the dog would almost certainly cause your son to resent the baby. NTA

SeriousValue − NTA. This extreme and unnecessary anxiety is 100% a product of the pregnancy hormones.

My suggestion would be to have her talk with a 3rd party (therapist) about why she fears the dog so much

and so someone unbiased can explain to her how little risk the dog poses to her and the baby. Best of luck, OP.

These commenters sympathized with both sides, citing anxiety

Disgraced_Pickle − NAH Something is causing her anxiety

and that should be addressed, carefully and with compassion.

It would be extremely traumatic for your son to loose his dog at the same time his Dad has a new baby.

She is going to have to have some compassion for him with this and you will need to protect him.

[Reddit User] − NAH, I would talk to her medical provider about pregnancy-induced anxiety.

I got it around food, and I remember crying because I saw a billboard about french fries, wanted to eat some,

and felt like a bad mom for thinking about eating fries because they're unhealthy.

It's ok, and even good to feel protective of your pregnancy, but the hormones can set that into overdrive.

Mine also made me suddenly hate kids. I worked in Chilecare.

I love kids, but every single thing was so annoying and gross, literally overnight.

Just try to help her feel less o__rwhelmed.

This wasn’t really about a dog; it was about fear, loyalty, and what happens when two kinds of protection collide.

Was the dad right to shield his son’s emotional world, or should easing pregnancy anxiety have come first? In blended families, even small decisions can leave big echoes. What would you have done in his place?

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