Daughter Accuses Mom Of Playing Favorites, But Mom Reminds Her She Chose To Move Across The Country

It’s easy to assume that love within a family should always look equal, but real life rarely works that neatly. Sometimes, circumstances like distance, work schedules, or finances shape relationships in ways that no one fully intends. Even when everyone means well, those differences can still hurt.

That’s what one mom discovered after her daughter traveled home for a family visit and came away feeling something wasn’t fair. Seeing how involved her mother was with the grandchild who lives nearby sparked a difficult conversation about favoritism, effort, and expectations.

The discussion eventually led to one blunt question that may have made things even worse. Now the mom is turning to the internet to ask whether she handled the situation poorly. Scroll down to read the story and decide for yourself.

Tension grows when a long-distance daughter compares her mother’s support to her sister’s

Daughter Accuses Mom Of Playing Favorites, But Mom Reminds Her She Chose To Move Across The Country
not the actual photo

AITAH for asking my daughter what she expected would happen when she started a family across the country?

I have 2 daughters: Emma (28) & Lizzie (25).

Emma went to college across the country and, upon graduating, got a job and stayed there.

She’s now married with a 2-year-old son. I did a lot of the “mother of the bride” stuff via FaceTime,

as due to my work schedule and financials, I couldn’t fly out there for everything.

So, for example, I FaceTimed into the dress shopping.

I flew down 2 weeks prior to the wedding to help get everything ready. When Emma was pregnant,

I kept talking to her friends, planning it, asking them to tell me when it was, so I could take enough time off work.

Emma ended up changing the date and there was no way I could afford to fly out on top of taking time off,

especially to be there after the baby was born (as Emma wanted). So, once again, FaceTime to the rescue.

I flew in and was there for her induction and stayed 2 weeks after. I have flown out to visit 4 times

since Emma has come to me 3 times. I do talk to Emma on the phone at least once a day, I FaceTime my grandbaby, etc.

I am not physically present, but I want to be as emotionally present as possible.

Emma and I discuss everything and she often says she’s glad we still have a close relationship.

Lizzie went to a state school and moved back to our town after graduating.

Therefore, I was able to physically be there for all of the big wedding moments, along with her pregnancy.

I was at her baby shower. As she now lives down the street,

I see her, her husband, and their now 1-year-old daughter at least 4-5 days a week.

I watch the baby so they can go on date nights. We are very close.

Emma and her family flew out for Lizzie’s daughter’s birthday.

I watched both kids so their parents could have separate date nights. I got to do more for my grandson, which I loved.

I took him on outings just us. I got to spend some one-on-one time with Emma, too.

I thought it was a really nice visit.

However, after returning home, Emma didn’t reach out or respond to my attempts at contact for 2 weeks.

When she finally did, I asked her if everything was alright.

She said that being back in town made her realize just how much I do for Lizzie and her husband.

She said that I am way more active, that I don’t visit her enough, etc.

I reminded her that I don’t have the money or the time off to fly out often.

I wish more than anything I did. I miss her and my grandson. Emma told me that I clearly have a favorite grandchild

and I should spend more time with him. I kept trying to find ways I could do more from a distance,

but she kept rebuffing them and saying the only way to make it better would be to visit more.

I finally asked what she expected to happen when she decided to start a family cross-country.

I am so proud of her and all she’s accomplished. I supported the move. But she is also aware of my situation.

It’d be one thing to say “Hey, it sucks we can’t see each other more!”

But she can’t move far away and expect everyone to come to her when they can’t financially.

Emma and I ended the call. I have since tried to talk to her, check on her mental health, etc.

She refuses to talk about anything deeper than her day-to-day and the little one.

She told her father (my ex), who lives closer to her. He called me to say that I was wrong to tell her this,

and that I should’ve just let her keep laying into me. AITA?

Family love rarely disappears when people move away, but distance can quietly reshape how that love is experienced. Many adult children believe their relationships with parents will stay the same no matter where life takes them.

Yet the truth is that proximity still matters. When one child lives nearby and another lives far away, the difference between emotional support and physical presence can start to feel like unequal love, even when no one intended it that way.

In this story, the mother wasn’t simply defending herself. She was trying to explain the painful gap between what she wished she could do and what her finances and work schedule allowed. She made efforts to stay connected with Emma, FaceTiming during wedding preparations, visiting for the birth, calling daily, and flying out when possible.

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But Emma’s visit home exposed something difficult: the everyday closeness her sister receives. Lizzie lives down the street, which naturally allows for spontaneous visits, babysitting, and shared moments that can’t easily be recreated from across the country.

Emma’s frustration may not be about favoritism as much as grief, grief for the kind of grandparent involvement she imagined for her child but can’t realistically have.

Another perspective is that distance can quietly distort perception. When people see the tangible acts someone else receives, like childcare, outings, or frequent visits, it can feel like proof of preference. Yet those moments often reflect logistics rather than emotional priority.

Emma might feel overlooked, while the mother might feel unfairly blamed for circumstances outside her control. Both reactions are human: one shaped by longing, the other by exhaustion.

Psychotherapist Barton Goldsmith, PhD, who writes about relationships and emotional health, explains that maintaining close bonds requires consistent shared experiences and emotional effort over time. Without regular interaction, even loving relationships can feel weaker or misunderstood because people rely more on assumptions than on daily connection.

Family researchers also note that geographic separation naturally reduces everyday interaction in extended families, which can create emotional ambivalence, simultaneous feelings of love, frustration, and longing within the same relationship.

Seen through this lens, Emma’s reaction may reflect a sudden awareness of what distance has cost her family life. Meanwhile, the mother’s response may come from the strain of already stretching herself emotionally and financially to stay involved. Neither perspective is necessarily wrong; they’re simply responding to different versions of the same reality.

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Perhaps the deeper takeaway is that families separated by distance often need to redefine what involvement looks like. Physical presence will never be equal, but emotional closeness can still exist in different forms.

The challenge is acknowledging the loss that distance creates without turning that loss into blame because sometimes the real conflict isn’t between family members, but between love and geography.

See what others had to share with OP:

This group roasted the ex for interfering and defended OP’s right to respond

HollyNoelle79 − Tell your ex that unless he's offering to help you financially to be there more,

he needs to shut his mouth and stay out of it.

SnoopyisCute − NTA Nobody has the right to tell you that you should take being mistreated.

Is he nuts? And, why is she being a little tattle tale? Let Daddy play balancing act for her.

ComprehensivePut5569 − NTA - Tell your ex to shut the hell up. Your daughter is a grown ass adult,

a wife, and a mother - she is too damn old to be throwing this tantrum.

She has every right to be disappointed, but she can’t be angry at the circumstances that she essentially created.

If she wants to see you more, why can’t she come home more often?

Or why can’t she pay for your travel so you can visit more often? I suggest you just give your daughter space.

Stop reaching out for a while and see if she calms down. If she really wants to have a closer relationship,

she needs to compromise and I don’t see her offering solutions.

These Redditors said moving away means accepting less family help

Material_Cellist4133 − As someone who is Emma in the situation, you are NTA.

This is what happens when you move away from family.

Fibro-Mite − NTA. I moved myself & my kids (3 & 6 at the time) to a different country, 9K miles away from my parents.

I knew that they would be way more present and available for my sisters’ children and didn’t expect any different.

We make our own choices and that means we have to own those choices.

She chose a different place to live, work and raise a family. Unless she’s willing to pay for you to visit regularly,

she really shouldn’t demand you visit more often than you can afford.

(I did resent that when I lived near them, they never helped me and always had excuses for not babysitting (ever)

but when my younger sisters both had kids after I left, suddenly, they are Grandparents of the Year candidates.

Oh well, there were many good reasons I was happy to move. )

Soft-Rub-3891 − Nta my wife moved cities my parents live a short drive away guess who helped out more?

Sounds like she moved for personal/career opportunities now later in life just realizing the family's downside.

No grandparents to babysit or give advice, no big family dinners and the cousins won’t know each other,

hard pill to swallow, give her a bit of time.

This group criticized Emma’s behavior as irrational, unfair, or entitled

Turmeric_Ping − NTA. And why should you have just accepted her laying into you?

She was being irrational and unfair, and you made that clear.

She's probably simultaneously still irrationally upset, but now also embarrassed about it.

TheTomahawk97 − NTA. Emma is being very unreasonable with you.

You've done everything in your power to be as present a mother and grandmother as you can.

Old_Confidence3290 − NTA. I've been trying to come up with a nice way of saying this,

but the best I can do is "Emma is an entitled a__hole".

These commenters agreed the daughter chose distance and must accept the consequences

LibraryMouse4321 − Your daughter made her choice to move far away. It’s not on you to visit her more,

it’s on her to visit you more. She’s the one who moved away.

Of course you are closer to the grandchild that you see all the time.

You see her because her parents chose to live closer by. It’s your daughter’s own fault, not yours.

You only spoke the truth.

PickleNotaBigDill − NTA. You are doing what you can to be an involved grandparent,

but you are right, the kids who live the closest are the ones who you see most, it only makes sense.

It is cost-prohibitive to constantly fly back and forth. You could suggest that Emma pay for your plane tickets,

because you'd surely love to be out there more often.

But just on your budget, it isn't feasible. I'd find it hard to make more than a trip a year across the country,

let alone multiple. You saying that was simply a practical remark.

The practicality of it is that had she not make her life so far away,

she'd be closer and you'd see her and her grandson more often.

Distance changes family dynamics in ways love alone can’t fix. One daughter stayed close, the other built a life far away and those choices created very different realities. The mom insists she’s doing everything she can, but the emotional gap still hurts.

Was she too blunt, or simply honest about the limits of distance? What do you think?

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