Norma, 36, is a widow, who doesn’t want to be single after her husband passed away. But her stepdaughter, 18, is literally sabotaging her every date. Norma made a serious move, asking her stepdaughter to move out, and things took a shocking turn since then.
Here’s an email we got from Norma and her story:
Hi,
My husband died 7 months ago. It was awful, I grieved, but I also don’t want to spend the rest of my life alone. I finally felt ready to date again. I’ve had a couple of guys over, nothing serious, but every time, my stepdaughter (18) would make a scene. She’d cry about her dad, sit in the living room looking miserable, or straight up refuse to leave the house so we had no privacy.
At some point I snapped and told her, “If you can’t handle me moving on, then maybe you need to move out, because I want to live my life.” She didn’t argue, in fact, she didn’t say a word, just smirked.
The next day, I got home and noticed that several boxes of my husband’s stuff were gone. When I asked her, she just looked me straight in the eye and said, “I donated them. You keep saying you want to move forward, so I thought I’d help you actually do it.”
I was furious. Those were my husband’s things, my memories, and she had no right to touch them. I told her she crossed a huge line, but she fired back that I don’t care about her grief and that I basically replaced her dad with “random men” after only 7 months.
From my perspective, she’s an adult now, and I’m not responsible for babysitting her feelings forever. I lost my husband too, and I deserve a life.
Was I wrong when I told her to move out?
Our community reacted to Norma’s confession with very emotional comments.
Our readers couldn’t pass by such an emotional and complex family story. Here are some thoughts our users shared in the comments section:
throwaway_cactus
She’s 18, not 8. At some point, she has to realize you also lost your husband, and you don’t owe her your loneliness just to prove you’re grieving the “right way.”
grief_is_messy
I lost my dad at 19, and I can tell you, 7 months feel like yesterday. She isn’t sabotaging you, she’s drowning in grief, and watching you move on feels like betrayal. That doesn’t excuse her taking things, but I get why she’s acting out.
user283748
Donating your husband’s belongings without your consent is crossing a massive line. That’s not “helping,” that’s controlling.
pastanoodles88
You literally told an 18-year-old, who just lost her father, to move out because her grief was inconvenient to your dating life. That’s rough.
midwestmom79
I remarried 10 months after my husband died, and my kids hated it. But I was honest with them: adults are allowed to move forward. Your stepdaughter doesn’t get veto power over your personal life.
bluejayflight
The way you wrote this makes you sound more focused on men than on your stepdaughter. I’m not saying you can’t date, but your coldness about her feelings is hard to read.
catlover_300
I don’t think either of you are handling grief well. You’re clashing because you’re in different stages. Maybe family counseling would help?
old_soul_54
18 is legally an adult, yes, but developmentally she’s still a teenager. Expecting her to just “move out” after losing her dad feels harsh.
Here’s what Bright Side team has to say to Norma:
Dear Norma,
If your stepdaughter “helped you move on” by donating your husband’s things, don’t just see it as sabotage, see it as a message in disguise. She doesn’t believe you’re grieving, because she hasn’t seen you grieve. To her, you skipped the stage of mourning and jumped to dating, so she assumed you also skipped the part where you sort through belongings.
Here’s the trick: instead of chasing therapy clichés or boundary talks, give her a role no one expects. Ask her to curate one box of her father’s things that you both agree to keep forever. Let her choose what goes inside, and let her watch you protect it. This flips the script — she stops being the self-appointed gatekeeper of his memory and becomes a co-author of what survives.
It won’t erase the sting of what she did, but it will force her to recognize that grief isn’t a competition, it’s an archive. And archives make more sense when two people work on preserving them together.
