AITA for reporting threats made by my husband's kids and their mom to CPS and then leaving because I'm pregnant?
The user, a 30-year-old female, has been married to her 33-year-old husband for two years, having been together for over four and a half years. Her husband has two children, aged 11 and 13, from a previous marriage. The relationship with the ex-wife became difficult after the user moved in, although initial contact was managed through reduction.
The situation escalated significantly after the user became pregnant. The husband's children reacted with anger, using aggressive language toward the user, including telling her to get an abortion. The children showed the user text messages from their mother which contained threats against the user and her unborn child. Following an attempt by the 11-year-old to act on these threats, the user reported the situation to Child Protective Services (CPS) and moved in with her parents, leaving her husband in doubt about her decision.













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As renowned family therapist Dr. Nedra Glover Tawwab explains, 'Boundaries are not about controlling other people; they are about knowing what you will do to take care of yourself when someone steps over a line.'
The core issue here transcends typical co-parenting or step-parenting challenges; it involves credible threats of physical harm against a pregnant woman and an unborn child. The husband’s initial response, characterized as being 'too blasé' and lacking a concrete safety plan after an actual attempt on safety occurred, indicates a severe failure in prioritizing his wife and unborn child's immediate security. When children are actively encouraged or influenced by an external party (the ex-wife) to make threats of violence, those threats must be treated as an immediate crisis, not merely a disciplinary issue.
The user’s action to report to CPS and temporarily separate was a necessary, self-protective measure rooted in establishing a firm boundary against violence. It is inappropriate for the husband or his parents to frame this as an escalation, as the escalation originated from the children’s threats and actions. Moving forward, the constructive recommendation is for the user to maintain separation until CPS investigation is complete and robust, enforceable safety protocols—including clear boundaries enforced by the husband and professional intervention for the children—are firmly in place and respected by all parties.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.:
Users didn’t stay quiet — they showed up in full force, mixing support with sharp criticism. From calling out bad behavior to offering real talk, the comments lit up fast.









The user is currently feeling conflicted, questioning if her decision to involve CPS and leave the marital home was an overreaction, despite having experienced direct threats and an attempted act of harm toward her and her unborn baby. Her primary concern remains the safety of her child, which contrasts sharply with her husband's and his family's reaction that she 'took it too far.'
The central debate revolves around whether the threat level warranted immediate protective action (reporting to CPS and separation) or if the situation should have been managed internally solely through the husband's discipline, especially given the husband's initial blasé reaction. Is the user justified in prioritizing her safety and the baby's safety above preserving the immediate family structure under these extreme circumstances?