Woman Faces A Family Ultimatum After Refusing To Cut Ties With Her Former Relative

A devoted sister stood her ground when her brother’s new wife demanded she erase a twenty-three-year bond with his ex. This was a lifelong confidante who had become a true sister through decades of shared memories and milestones. The family dynamic remained peaceful and cooperative until the new bride decided to play sheriff, attempting to scrub the past clean by banning the “old” wife from every birthday and private gathering.

The audacity of the request turned a simple guest list into a social battlefield, pitting fresh insecurity against deep-rooted loyalty. While the newcomer claimed she was merely claiming her rightful place, she actually ignited a fierce cold war by trying to dictate who her in-laws could love.

A Redditor refuses to dump her ex-sister-in-law of 23 years despite the new wife’s demands for total social isolation.

Woman Faces A Family Ultimatum After Refusing To Cut Ties With Her Former Relative
Not the actual photo.

'AITAH for telling my new SIL that I will not stop inviting my ex-SIL to my house?'

My brother was married to Carla for literally 23 years, I have known her

since I was 16 years old and honestly she's like a sister to me and I'm even more closer with her than with my brother.

He married Maura two years ago and has a child with her, while he also has two with Carla.

The co-parenting between them is good and they divorced because of differences, there are no bad feelings.

Carla goes to my mother's house, to my house or to my sisters' house as always and we go to visit her too.

It was literally 23 years and apart from that there is my nephew and niece in the middle.

The family relationship with Maura is good, Carla does NOT come to things like Christmas or gatherings

that are only family things since she herself said that she does not want to make my brother and Maura feel uncomfortable.

We visit each other alone or go on trips together, even our friend group is the same so we're obviously still close.

A few days ago Maura came up to me to tell me that it would be good of me to stop inviting Carla to my house and birthdays

(my birthday or my children's birthdays) now that my nephews are older.

I told her that I'm not going to stop hanging out with Carla and she got offended,

we had a little argument about it and she told me that I'm not giving her her place as my brother's wife

and I'm being disrespectful to her because we should have low-contact with Carla, I told her that Carla is my friend and I'm not going to cut her off.

I know she's jealous but at this point it's like asking me to stop seeing a friend, AITAH?

The crux of the issue lies in Maura’s demand for “low-contact” with Carla, the woman who has been part of the family fabric since the OP was sixteen.

From Maura’s perspective, she is fighting for “her place” as the current wife, a title she feels is being diluted by the lingering presence of her predecessor. However, the OP rightly points out that Carla isn’t just an “ex”, she’s a friend, a mother to their niece and nephew, and essentially a sister.

This situation touches on the evolving nature of “chosen family” in modern society. As divorce rates and blended families become the norm, the rigid lines of who “belongs” in a home are blurring.

According to a report by the Pew Research Center, about 16% of children live in blended families, meaning the “ex” is rarely truly gone. Navigating these waters requires an immense amount of emotional maturity, something Maura seems to be lacking in her quest for total social dominance.

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Expert psychologists often suggest that the “new” spouse’s insecurity usually stems from a fear of comparison rather than actual competition. Dr. Joshua Coleman, a psychologist and senior fellow with the Council on Contemporary Families, notes: “The challenge for the new spouse is to recognize that the history between the family and the ex-wife is not a threat to their current marriage, but a testament to the family’s capacity for long-term loyalty.”

In this case, Maura is viewing a bridge as a barrier, failing to see that the OP’s loyalty to Carla actually suggests they will likely be just as loyal to her if she plays her cards right.

The best solution here? A neutral but firm boundary. The OP isn’t choosing an ex-wife over a brother; they are choosing a 23-year-old friendship over a newcomer’s demand for isolation. While it’s important to make Maura feel welcomed at “official” family events, she doesn’t get a veto on who walks through the OP’s private front door.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Some users argue that the sister-in-law’s demands are rooted in insecurity and that she cannot dictate who the user invites.

Upper_Scarcity_2807 − NTA, new SIL does not get to dictate who you hang out with. Sounds like she needs to deal with her insecurities.

And I find it amazing that the rest of you still maintain a relationship, especially since it was an amicable split.

SummerOracle − NTA. Carla being your friend is a separate relationship to her being your brother’s ex-wife. You spend time with her as a friend,

and Maura is not entitled to dictate who you can be friends with, nor who you get to invite into your own home.

She needs to deal with her insecurities on her own, rather than attempt to force you into pandering to them.

SummerStar62 − What is she? 13? NTA tell her to take her middle school drama back to her homeroom.

Other people emphasize that the relationship with the ex-wife is an independent friendship and involves the mother of the nieces.

Particular_Title42 − NTA. Maura already has her place as your brother's wife.

It was given to her by your brother. You're not giving her Carla's place as your friend and you are not obligated to. She is also not just your friend...

1lifeisworthit − You aren't inviting Carla as your brother's wife. You are inviting Carla as your current friend.

You invite Maura as your brother's wife, and that's all she has the right to.

lovebeinganasshole − NTA. Maura married and had a baby with a man that had an ex wife and kids. Those things don’t magically disappear.

Many believe the new wife is acting entitled by trying to erase the husband’s previous life and existing family dynamics.

jojozabadu − A few days ago Maura came up to me to tell me that it would be good of me

to stop inviting Carla to my house and birthdays now that my nephews are older. Entitled piece of s__t much?

youmustb3jokn − Maura knew what she was getting into. She is being unreasonable.

Next is she going to demand his kids from Carla aren’t involved in her life as to continue to live in the delusion that her husband and his family never...

By the way, Carla sounds lovely. Maura sounds entitled.

UnquantifiableLife − I have an uncle who divorced his wife after 30+ years of marriage. I don't care what anyone says, she is my aunt. Period.

She called me shortly after it was final and said, "Hi it's Jane" when I picked up.

I knew what she felt like she was supposed to do. F__k that, I thought. "Hi Aunt Jane" I said back. My uncle's new gf can deal with it. Your...

A few commenters make assumptions or snarky remarks about the age gap or maturity of the new sister-in-law.

Sugarpuff_Karma − Tell me he married at least 10+ years younger without telling me...

At the end of the day, a two-year marriage shouldn’t be a wrecking ball for a twenty-year bond. Do you think the Redditor’s refusal to drop Carla was fair given the lifelong stakes, or did they overplay their hand and disrespect the new bride? How would you juggle being a “sibling’s keeper” while maintaining your own friendships in this mess? Share your hot takes below!

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