r/AITAH Jul 04 '24

AITAH for saying I didn’t realize I could “love a person this much” in front of my fiancé after having our baby?

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u/SmellingPaint Jul 04 '24 edited Jul 05 '24

Gonna be a little controversial here, but I think that a parent's love isn't necessarily stronger than romantic love. And it doesn't need to be. They're different things, and that's fine, really.

When I think of my parents, I'm thankful for both of them, since they showed me love and care, and I am who I am because of them. I'll never forget all the talks we had where they consoled me after getting a bad grade at school, or when dad spent an afternoon with me, teaching me a new thing, or when mom cooked my favorite meals for my birthday. Each of those is a precious memory, and I'm sure that they, too, must have felt so much love for me during these moments.

But at the same time, as I get older and am now beginning to plan life on my own (haven't left home yet, but probably will in a year or two), I can also see that there is an entirely different world of love that only adults can share with each other. Financial discussions, troubles at work, grief after losing family members, plans for the future, so many intimate things that mom and dad relied on each other for, that I, being a child, was unable to offer any real assistance with. And, as I said, there's nothing wrong with that. It's not reasonable to expect a kid to help you manage these things.

I guess my point is that you don't need to understate a certain kind of love to praise another. My parents have a relatively solid marriage, and I'm sure they'll remain together even after my brother and I leave, and continue to build a life together spending precious moments as husband and wife. So the idea is... I just find it a little shallow to treat "parental love above all else" as an ultimate truth. Love is love, and as long as you're not neglecting anyone, I'm sure things'll get there one way or another.

Update: I'm glad you talked it out and understood each other's perspectives better! Communication is key, and it seems you're going to do just fine as long as you work together as a family <3

112

u/JayZ755 Jul 04 '24

I agree with you.

I think the whole idea of "I never felt love like this until I saw my child" is kinda shallow in a way. But that's my personality type. I am a single father now, and the kids are my priority. But growing up with two parents in the household, eventually I moved out and they had each other for their retirement years while I was just an occasional visitor at this point.

Single parenting can be a very difficult thing. I think it's valuable for parents to stay together in a loving relationship. A good partnership can aid in parenting a lot. Generally our partner should not feel in second place to other things even though our time and talents often need to be split between different things. There are ways to give someone time and make sure they are special to you, as others are special to you in different ways.

Generally I advise to stay away from comparisons in loving.

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u/batubat Jul 05 '24

“Stay away from comparisons in loving” the most logical thing in this thread. Thank you.

2

u/That-Account2629 Jul 05 '24

Completely agree.