
Dad Shuts Down 12-Year-Old Daughter's 'Period Party'—Internet Agrees
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A father who canceled a surprise "period party" planned by his wife for their 12-year-old daughter has been backed on social media.
In a Reddit post titled "AITAH [Am I the A******] for putting a stop to my 12yo daughter's 'period party'?" u/YocaLocaChoca detailed how he intervened to protect his daughter's privacy and emotional well-being when his wife tried to throw an unsolicited celebration to mark her first period.
Newsweek reached out to u/YocaLocaChoca via Reddit direct message.
Stock image: A young couple have an argument at home.
Stock image: A young couple have an argument at home.
PeopleImages
The original poster, a 43-year-old father of two daughters, said that the younger of the two recently confided in him—visibly upset—that she had gotten her first period.
The dad offered calm support: comfort, practical guidance, and even Midol and ice cream. She was grateful and asked for nothing more.
But, when the girl's mother got home, she had other ideas. "Wife starts crying, 'my little girl is growing up,' then asks who should be invited to the 'period party,'" he wrote.
Their daughter, already shy by nature, was immediately uncomfortable and declined the idea.
Two days later, despite the daughter's clear wishes, the mother went ahead with the party plans anyway.
The father came home to find their house decorated "like something from My Super Sweet 16," with guests already arriving.
Their daughter, sensing what was happening, ran upstairs to do homework in the father's office seeking refuge.
That is when he stepped in. "She told you specifically she DIDN'T want one of these," he told his wife, blocking her from dragging their daughter into the party.
The two argued in the hallway as the mom said the celebration was "for her own good." Despite being told he "wouldn't understand," the dad stood his ground.
Eventually, he addressed the gathered women himself, calmly explaining that his daughter had explicitly said she did not want a party and was being pressured into one anyway. Guests quickly dispersed, and the daughter returned once the coast was clear.
In the aftermath, the mother was angry for a week, accusing him of undermining her authority and embarrassing her in front of their social circle.
At the time of writing, the post has received more than 28,000 upvotes and a further 4,700 comments of support for the father.
"Puberty is an awkward, embarrassing time. Having your parents shine a spotlight on every confusing milestone would be a nightmare," one user wrote.
"Your wife wanted the period party. Not your daughter. This was your wife trying to gain social points with her friends using your daughter as a prop for her little empowerment show," another posted.
Krista Walker, LCSW, J.D., and clinical director at The Ohana Addiction Treatment Center, told Newsweek that this is a good example of how a parent's expectations are clashing with their child's boundaries.
"The child has stated her boundaries. She did not want the period party, yet the mother threw one anyway," Walker said. "This invalidates the child's feelings and dismisses her boundaries. While the mother might have had good intentions, this is not OK."
Walker added that the father responded in a way that supported his daughter and respected her boundaries.
"Ideally, there is open communication between the parents and alignment about these types of issues," Walker said. "In this case, these things were missing. Ideally, the parents would have handled the situation better and not in public."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Small Earthquake Rattles NYC and New Jersey Saturday Night
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A small earthquake shook the New York metropolitan area Saturday evening, registering a magnitude of 3.0 according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). The tremor struck in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, less than eight miles west of Manhattan's Central Park, at a depth of approximately 6.2 miles underground. NYC Emergency Management quickly issued guidance on social media to residents following the seismic event, confirming that tremors were felt across parts of New York City. The agency reported no major impacts at the time while coordinating with partner agencies to monitor for any potential damage or aftershocks. Why It Matters While earthquakes are relatively uncommon in the Northeast, this event highlights the region's ongoing seismic activity in one of the nation's most densely populated urban centers. The earthquake's proximity to Manhattan underscores the importance of emergency preparedness planning and public awareness in metropolitan areas not typically associated with frequent seismic events. A magnitude 3.0 earthquake is reported to have occurred in or near New Jersey. Tremors may have been felt in parts of New York City. NYC Emergency Management is monitoring for impacts and coordinating with agency partners. RECOMMENDED ACTIONS: USGS Earthquake Guidance:… — NYC Emergency Management (@nycemergencymgt) August 3, 2025 What To Know The earthquake originated in the Ramapo Fault system, a known seismic zone running through New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Despite its minor magnitude of 3.0, the shallow depth allowed the tremor to be felt across the metropolitan region as a brief swaying sensation lasting only seconds. NYC Emergency Management provided comprehensive safety guidance following the event, advising residents to check for hazards such as shifted items, falling debris, or cracks if they experienced shaking. The agency emphasized that no immediate protective action was needed unless damage occurred, while warning residents to remain prepared for possible aftershocks that could follow minutes, hours, or days after the initial quake. The city established clear reporting channels for residents, directing earthquake reports to the USGS and non-emergency damage reports to 311, while reserving 911 calls for life-threatening emergencies only. What People Are Saying NYC Emergency Management posted on X: "Be prepared for possible aftershocks. These may follow minutes, hours, or even days after the initial quake. No immediate protective action is needed unless you experienced damage." The Empire State Building's official X account posted: "I AM FINE" FILE IMAGE: A thunderstorm passes over the skyline of lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in New York City on July 31, 2025, as seen from Jersey City, New Jersey. FILE IMAGE: A thunderstorm passes over the skyline of lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in New York City on July 31, 2025, as seen from Jersey City, New Happens Next? Seismologists will continue monitoring the region for aftershocks, though significant follow-up tremors are unlikely given the earthquake's small magnitude. The U.S. Geological Survey will analyze data from the event to better understand regional seismic patterns and improve future preparedness efforts. NYC Emergency Management will maintain coordination with agency partners while encouraging residents to stay informed through official city sources and NotifyNYC alerts. Reporting from the Associated Press contributed to this article.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
"It's Sad When It Gets To This": People Are Revealing The Subtle Signs That Indicate Someone Is Quietly Planning To Leave Their Relationship, And This Is Heartbreaking
Relationships come and go, but some people change habits and behaviors long before they even officially break up. So when I saw Reddit user Same_Market2143 ask: "What's a sign someone is quietly planning to leave their relationship/marriage?" I wanted to share everyone's responses. Here's what they said below: 1."They stop arguing. Total silence replaces fights they've checked out." —Key_Use_676 "The opposite of love isn't hate. It is indifference." —Einar23HD 2."They take longer routes home. Every time." —Admirable-Study560 "And/or stay in their cars for as long as they can when they arrive home. Just want to say this is an indicator and not a fool-proof way to tell that something is wrong in your relationship. I understand there are other reasons people chill in their car before heading inside." —Ill-Squirrel-9418 3."My ex-wife and I had a roommate, and when they found a new place, she started helping them pack their clothes into boxes. A few days before their actual move-out date, I noticed some of her things weren't around anymore, things I was used to seeing every day. That's when it hit me: She was quietly packing up her own stuff too. A week later, both the roommate and my wife moved out." —whstlngisnvrenf "Did they move out together into a shared space? Were they romantically involved?" —Americano_Joe "Yes, they moved out together into the same place. No. Neither woman is lesbian nor bisexual. All this happened 15 years ago." —whstlngisnvrenf 4."When the conversations get shorter and the silences get louder." —Many-Stress1356 "And when the other partner either doesn't notice, or thinks it's a positive change (finally some peace and quiet)? Absolutely doomed." —jc_chienne 5."You can't figure out the last time you had sex or had a romantic moment." —CtrlAltDeleteY0u "It's sad when it gets to this, especially if you keep trying to have the intimacy but the effort just seems one-sided, and you just get rejected over and over for a long, long time. You start wishing you didnt have feelings for the person anymore so you wouldn't notice this lack of any romance or would stop having the need for it." —cheesy_way_out 6."They don't look you in the eye. Disengagement. Day-to-day stuff, they can engage, but nothing deeper than that." —Knute5 "This sadly also describes me, thanks to my anxiety and depression. I sincerely hope my wife isn't reading this and thinks I'm getting ready to leave her. She's my entire world, and I would not be here amongst the living if not for her." —JPMoney81 7."They start buying new clothes but don't mention where they're going." —Still_Fee497 8."They stop giving a damn about anything to do with you. They make future plans that clearly don't have you in them." —blad02887f 9."When they suddenly get super secretive with their phone, even though they never cared before." —misscexy "At my son's little league game, I accidentally folded my wife's phone up in the collapsible chair. She about body slammed the chair to get her phone back." —saltfish 10."The partner's friends see you a lot less." —girlgoneawhile 11."As a man, I did several things that should have (and eventually did, but not until the last second) tipped off my soon-to-be ex-wife." "I grew my hair long. It's still long. It's symbolic in that it grew along with my inner strength and will. I'm keeping it this way because it looks good, and I fucking like it, and it's my body to do with as I please. I threw myself hard into health and fitness. Not to attract women, I have zero interest in ever having another relationship, but for me. I want to be the best version of myself as I age, for me and for my kids. I grew increasingly calm and willing to walk away from arguments. Screaming at each other didn't solve a damn thing and just upset the kids, so I refused to do it anymore. Talking never solved a thing, so I stopped doing it. She thought she'd won, but I had stopped even playing the game. I started going to therapy. She thought it was to work on all the things she said were wrong with me, but really it was to work on the things I wanted to improve about myself, and to work through all the damage she had caused from years of emotional and physical abuse. I started being very frugal because I was saving money as hard as I could, so I could afford to move out, hire an attorney, etc. Sex became far less frequent, and even when we did have sex, half the time I'd just get tired and quit in the middle of it. It's difficult to be passionate about the person who makes you miserable every day." —Fluffy-Fox-9862 12."Finances change. Someone getting ready to leave a marriage is likely making sure their own finances are in order first." —babsalogna 13."Buying individual items of things you already share. Before I left my ex, I bought my own Nintendo Switch even though we had one together, because I knew he'd take it, and I didn't want to game on a console I'd lose." "In the same vein, watch out for a partner who is suddenly backing up/transferring data from shared devices to their personal storage." —Responsible_Ad_2937 14."Small things you've done for the person you love are gone. He always bought you that soda you like, now he suddenly forgets? She used to write you small texts of affection, but now the phone is silent at work. You don't care if they call. You don't care when they take longer hours at work." —empty-atom finally, "I took off my rings about a month before I asked for a divorce. They started hurting my skin even before I made my decision." —SomeRandom215 Is there a clear sign that signals that someone is quietly planning to leave their relationship/marriage? Tell us in the comments or anonymously in the Google Form below:" Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Mother-in-Law Schedules Visit to Meet 1-Week-Old Grandchild 'Without Asking' 'Exhausted' Mom — and Brings 'a Stranger Along'
"I don't want to entertain guests, I don't want to make small talk, and I definitely don't want to host someone I've never met before," she writes on RedditNEED TO KNOW A woman says her mother-in-law has planned a surprise visit to see her just days after she gave birth — and she wants to bring someone along But the woman says she's in no condition for visitors Now, she wants to know if it would be "unreasonable" to say she doesn't want visitors yetA woman says her mother-in-law has planned a surprise visit to see her just one week after she gave birth. In a post shared to Reddit, the anonymous woman writes, "I just gave birth to my second daughter five days ago, and I've just returned home from the hospital. I'm physically still recovering, bleeding, breastfeeding, barely sleeping, and emotionally trying to settle into this new chapter. "On top of that, my older daughter is feeling a bit emotional and clingy after I was away for a few days, so things are already overwhelming," she adds. Despite her current situation, her mother-in-law sent a message in their family group chat stating that "she has 'scheduled' a visit to come over in two days." The matriarch noted that she would be bringing her sister along, whom the poster has "never met." "She never asked me if I'm okay with this. She just informed* us that she's coming," she adds. Now, the woman writes, she's "furious." "I don't understand how someone (even the baby's grandmother) thinks it's appropriate to invite themselves into a postpartum woman's home less than a week after she's given birth, without asking, and worse, to bring a stranger along," she writes. "I'm in pain. I'm exhausted. I'm bleeding. I'm trying to soothe a newborn and help my toddler adjust. I haven't slept properly in nights. I don't want to entertain guests, I don't want to make small talk, and I definitely don't want to host someone I've never met before." Now, she wants to know if it would be "unreasonable" to say she doesn't want visitors yet. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Fellow Reddit users are advising the woman to let her husband handle it. "This is a husband/partner conversation to have with her and not your battle. Tell him that you aren't feeling good and don't want anyone over until x date and ask them to tell their mother that she needs to reschedule," writes one Reddit user in the comments. "This is absolutely transgressing and inconsiderate behavior. It's not only impolite but also insane to impose yourself without asking on a woman so shortly postpartum," another added. "I would be livid. And not hosting her. Tell your husband to write it doesn't work for you and you tell her when you guys (as a family !!! Not you yourself) are ready." In an update, the woman shares that her husband "did step up" and told his mom that she is "still recovering" and "completely exhausted," asking that she reschedule the visit to a time he is also home. However, his mother "kept insisting on visiting anyway." "She completely disregarded our boundaries and made it about what's convenient for her and her guests, not what's best for me or the baby," the poster writes. Since her mother-in-law has refused to compromise, the poster plans on "locking myself and my kids in the bedroom and resting" when her in-laws come over. "As many of you suggested, I don't owe anyone my time, energy, or space, especially not when I'm already depleted," she writes. "I'm done trying to accommodate someone who clearly doesn't care about my wellbeing." Read the original article on People