Mom Worries Daughter Will Feel Less Loved After Son Gets Special Birthday Treatment, Husband Says She’s Overreacting

Sometimes, small traditions can grow into something bigger than we ever intended, especially when kids are involved. OP started a fun St. Patrick’s Day tradition for her son, with a playful “leprechaun” leaving surprises each year.

But over time, what felt like a lighthearted idea has slowly turned into something that centers entirely around him, leaving her daughter out of the experience.

Now OP is starting to notice a pattern. Between different birthday celebrations and this ongoing tradition, she worries her daughter might one day feel like she was treated differently. Her husband doesn’t see the issue and thinks she’s overthinking it. But is she really? Keep reading to see how others view this growing concern.

A parent worries their daughter may feel overlooked as family traditions increasingly center around her brother’s birthday celebrations

Mom Worries Daughter Will Feel Less Loved After Son Gets Special Birthday Treatment, Husband Says She’s Overreacting
not the actual photo

'AITAH for thinking my daughter will look back and wonder why we treated her differently?'

Our son (5) Ken was born on St Patrick’s day.

When I was near my due date with our daughter (2) Amy, I hoped it’d be 11/11 so both my kids had a “lucky” “holiday” birthday, but she wasn’t.

Second child thing is 100% a thing. I haven’t felt as controlling of things for her as I did when Ken was born with making everything just right

(there was a lot of anxiety when he was born, could also pertain to being a covid baby).

Ken has had a party every year since his 1st bday with all our friends and family.

Amy had a small party in our home with some close family and even fewer friends invited due to size.

We wanted to have a big party and planned to maybe hold one later for her, but weren’t able to.

She did get a big party at her second bday, but I still feel guilty for that first one.

2 years ago I was babysitting my niece (5) and she was saying she needed to make a leprechaun trap for school.

We helped her build one and built one ourselves.

This is the third year a leprechaun has been to our home causing mischief for a week before the 17th. Here is where the real issue begins.

I thought that the leprechaun was a new thing that parents were doing for their kids like the elf in the shelf.

In no way did I think it was going to be strictly a leprechaun visiting Ken because of his birthday.

That is what it has turned into. Ken gets so excited about “Rascal” each year (third year doing it),

but apparently neither my brother nor sister did it this year for their kids (did it last two) because leprechauns are only coming for kids born on st Patrick’s day.

Idk how the heck that happened. But I at least thought the leprechaun was here visiting Amy as well.

My mom made a comment when I picked both kids up last night that she was told differently.

I didn’t get to talk to my husband last night about it, but we woke up early to decorate this morning.

This is the third year that Ken had woken up to balloons and streamers everywhere for his birthday.

I asked DH if we were leaving some coins behind for Amy. He said no since the leprechaun is only here for Ken.

I asked if that meant we were going to find something special to do for Amy’s birthday then. He said no.

He said that by the time she’s old enough to realize there was a leprechaun for Ken’s birthday,

we will have stopped because Ken will be old enough to know they aren’t real.

I don’t believe that’s true. We started the leprechaun when Ken turned 3, only 8 months older than Amy is now.

Even if we do it two more times, it’s enough for her to know.

Also, when she’s an adult, I don’t want her to look back and wonder why we basically did a weeklong celebration of her brothers birthday

where he’d wake up to streamers and balloons everywhere, and she didn’t.

Coupled with the first birthday and second child syndrome, is it wrong to worry about her feeling differently?

My husband thinks I’m ridiculous for wanting to figure something out for her birthday.

We fought about it, and he thinks I’m an AH for trying to make things more difficult.

Edit: To everyone that genuinely responded, thank you.

After sitting for a bit, I proceeded to do more “mischievous” things besides the balloons and streamers.

I made a note from the leprechaun stating he loved the balloons and streamers mom and dad put up for Ken’s birthday,

that he hoped both kids had a wonderful St Patricks Day, he enjoyed visiting them both, and he left both kids some money.

I waited until the kids got up, let my son know me and his father did the birthday streamers and balloons

and read him the note so he is well aware the leprechaun was for both him and Amy.

I don’t think that he himself ever realized or thought the leprechaun was only for him as that was never my intention.

I also made a big deal with Amy, showing her what the leprechaun left her.

I then told my husband that we are going to be decorating the house every year for both kids and they will know it’s us and not some magical creature.

I feel for every one of you that were made to feel less than another sibling or cousin.

I will make sure I do my absolute best to make sure neither of my kids ever feels that way or thinks they’re unequal.

What if one of them grows up feeling less special? It rarely comes from one big mistake. More often, it builds slowly through patterns, who gets the bigger excitement, who gets the traditions, who seems to have more “magic” attached to their childhood. That emotional instinct the original poster (OP) is feeling is not irrational. It’s grounded in something psychology has studied for years.

In this situation, OP isn’t reacting to a single birthday difference. She’s noticing how repeated experiences are forming a pattern. Her son’s birthday has evolved into a multi-day tradition filled with anticipation, decorations, and imagination. Meanwhile, her daughter’s celebrations, while still loving, haven’t carried the same emotional intensity or ritual.

The “leprechaun tradition” unintentionally becoming centered on only one child makes that gap more visible. Children don’t track fairness through logic. They absorb it through repetition and emotional memory.

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What makes this important is not equality in a literal sense, but perceived fairness. Research shows that even subtle differences in how children are treated can shape how they view themselves within the family.

Studies on parental favoritism consistently find that when children feel less favored, it can affect their emotional well-being, self-worth, and sibling relationships.

For example, a large body of research summarized in a meta-analysis and psychological studies shows that differential treatment between siblings can have negative developmental consequences, especially for the child who feels less prioritized.

Even more striking, research has found that parental favoritism is linked to lower psychological well-being and strained sibling relationships later in life.

Another important layer is how children interpret these differences. According to social comparison theory, kids naturally compare themselves to their siblings to understand their own value.

When one child consistently receives more visible excitement or special traditions, the other may internalize that difference as meaning something about their worth, even if that was never the parent’s intention.

This is exactly why OP’s concern matters. She isn’t trying to make things “equal” in a rigid way. She’s recognizing how meaning is formed over time. A week of magical buildup for one child versus a simpler experience for another can quietly translate into a feeling of imbalance. And those feelings don’t come from logic, they come from emotion.

What stands out here is that OP isn’t asking to take anything away from her son. She’s trying to create something meaningful for her daughter too. That’s a crucial difference. It reflects awareness, not overreaction.

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In the end, parenting isn’t about perfect balance. It’s about intentional balance. Small, thoughtful adjustments, like creating equally meaningful traditions for each child, can shape how they remember their childhood for years. And that awareness, more than anything, is what helps ensure that no child grows up quietly wondering where they stood.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

These users argue that OP and her husband are clearly favoring the son, which will harm the daughter emotionally

International-Fee255 − You are treating her differently.

She doesn't have second child syndrome, she has crappy parents and a crappy family who treat her like a second class citizen.

Jenicillin − YTA. Treat your second born daughter the same way you treat your son. I f__king guarntee she will notice.

Munks1392 − YTA are you really asking if you're the a$$hole because your son is obviously favored and you won't change that because your husband said no?

Creamy_Breve − Your husband favors your son and you're seemingly unable to do something equally as special for your daughter.

I don't get why you don't just do something special for her.

You're not your husband's child who needs his permission before you do something special for your daughter, are you? If not, then just plan something.

If you don't start taking initiative and making her feel equal now then she'll grow up to think she's not good enough and resent you both.

She'll start noticing the disparities between her and her golden child brother even before she starts kindergarten.

Your son will grow up an entitled ah if you keep this unbalanced dynamic up.

Do something or you won't only be the AH but a bad mom. Your husband is already a bad father.

Mysterious-Tune-3216 − Your husband is the AH because he favours your son.

And YTA because you've been allowing the favouritism towards your son to go unchallenged at the expense of your daughter.

You don't need your husband's permission to plan something special for your daughter.

So why aren't you starting to make plans on a tradition and something special for your daughter on her birthday? Laziness?

Or you also share the same level of favourtism towards your son, and you aren't willing to acknowledge it?

Because you don't need a holiday such as Saint Patrick's Day for your daughter to also wake up on her birthday to balloons and streamers every where in the house....

Either both your son and your daughter get a week long celebrating their birthday and waking up to balloons & streamers or they don't....

There doesn't need to be a 'lucky holiday' involved for equal treatment of your children on their birthdays.

As the younger sibling who wasn't treated as favourable by my mom as my older brother was,

let me just tell you that your daughter WILL notice the preferential treatment that is given to her older brother!

I noticed from a young age how less effort was put into my birthdays in comparison to my brothers.

I noticed how my mom loved and cared for my older brother, whilst I was often an afterthought and excluded.

Btw, I eventually found out that my own mom wasn't there for my first birthday party. She was 'too busy'.

So just because you assume that you're safe from your daughter ever finding out the lack of effort put into her birthdays in her early years, well you are wrong.

There is always the chance that she will find out, just like how I found out.

CMeNaught − Is your husband actually trying to argue that it's okay to blatantly favor your son in ANY way because he thinks your daughter won't notice?

Your son will notice. You will notice. Your husband will notice.

And yeah, your daughter will notice. She might not have the words at that age but she'll know her parents live her brother more.

YTA if you accept anything less than equality for your kids.

Fioreborn − YTA Your oldest will resent you for making his birthday about the holiday and not him and your youngest

will resent you for not celebrating her birthday the way you do oldest.

This group believes the issue is easily fixable by giving the daughter the same effort and celebration

Marzipan_civil − The fact that Kens birthday is st Patrick's day has nothing to do with the fact that

"he wakes up to a house full of balloons and streamers" and "his birthday is celebrated for a full week".

You can put up balloons and streamers for Amy, you can have a party for Amy.

Her birthday is special because it's her day, it doesn't need an external celebration to add to it.

Edit: NTA for wanting to make sure both kids have a special day.

Now you just need to make sure your daughter's third birthday (and future birthdays) are fun for her.

Your husband is currently AH for wanting to treat the kids differently.

Wolf-Pack85 − I don’t understand why you just don’t do the same thing for her birthday, even though it’ll be a little different?

You don’t need a leprechaun to put up streamers and balloons to celebrate your child?

YTA and so is your husband. You both seem to prefer your son over your daughter and that’s damaging to her.

Either stop making a huge deal out of his birthday or include her birthday in the same way.

clxz2106 − Even if there's no leprechaun, why can't the balloons and streamers be a thing? You can have a whole party for her without the leprechaun.

keesouth − You and this notion of "lucky birthdays" created this problem and you can stop it.

Stop with the leprechaun thing. Let your kid wake up to streamers just because it's their birthday and do the same for your second kid.

You're going to eventually p__s off your eldest kid as well if you keep associating his birthday with St. Patrick's day.

It sucks having a birthday near a holiday, and I say this as someone with a birthday close to Christmas.

The holiday inevitably overshadows your birthday. The best thing you can do for both your kids is to just make their birthdays about them specifically.

If you do that you'll be acting fairly with both of them. YTA

These commenters criticize both sides

GlitteringBryony − ESH, just stop celebrating St Patrick's day (You're clearly not Irish, nobody in Ireland pretends

there is a leprechaun visiting on St Patrick's day) and give both of your kids normal parties of approximately equal size and value.

SheepPup − ESH (except the kids) So Amy doesn’t have a leprechaun, what about a fairy or a unicorn that visits and leaves balloons and streamers?

It’s gross as hell that your husband wants to do all this for your son but do nothing for your daughter.

You need to take a long hard look at how sexist your husband is and how sexist his family is and decide if

that’s how you think your daughter should be raised, always a second class citizen,

not even worthy of consideration for doing something equivalent for her birthday. Just a flat no.

Take a long hard look and I think you’ll see that this isn’t isolated to birthdays, does your husband spend as much time with your daughter as your son?

Does he give your daughter the same kind of opportunities as he gives (or gave at the same age) your son?

Does he take your son on special outings or trips and not your daughter?

Does he get special treats for son and not daughter? I’m betting there’s a disparity there.

It’s not about your son being a covid baby, it’s about your son being a son and not a daughter.

Would you keep the magic as is, or rewrite it so both kids feel equally seen? Drop your thoughts below!

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