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  • AITA- Snuggle Negotiations & Banana Breath

    AITA for Requesting My Father’s Presence in My Room Every Night Like It’s an Emotional Airbnb?
    By James, Age 3 (Frequent Flyer of Feelings, Mattress Negotiator)


    Hello. It is I. James. Toddler. Thought-leader. Midnight roommate.

    I am not unreasonable. I simply want the soft man. The comforting one. The one with beard stubble and snack-sharing tendencies. Daddy.

    Last night, I declared my intention clearly and with passion:
    “Daddy sleep here. NOW.”
    Mom blinked. Daddy hesitated. I intensified my vibe.

    Why do I want Dad in my room?
    Let’s discuss:

    • Mom smells like rules.
    • Dad smells like popcorn and vague optimism.
    • When Dad sleeps beside me, the monsters take PTO.
    • His snoring sounds like a sleepy motorcycle and I find that relaxing.
    • He does the voices. All of them. Even the dinosaur with taxes.
    • He doesn’t ask why I brought four bananas to bed. He celebrates.

    Mom argues:
    “This isn’t sustainable.”
    “I need sleep too.”
    “He has a back.”

    Okay. Valid points. But may I remind you: I am three.
    My needs include proximity, breath sharing, and unspoken cuddles.
    Mom gets bedtime.
    Dad gets overnight emotional security duty.
    That’s balance.

    I set up his sleeping space perfectly:

    • One blanket
    • One pillow (thin, decorative, mostly symbolic)
    • One stuffed elephant named Tuna
    • A headlamp (I don’t know why, but it felt necessary)

    Sometimes he resists. Says “I need to go back to my own bed.”
    But I counter with tears and interpretive sob-dancing.
    He stays.

    So tell me, Internet:
    AITA for demanding Dad in my room every night, even though he wakes up with a sock stuck to his back and the vague scent of banana breath?

    Or am I simply fighting for comfort, consistency, and the deepest kind of love: the kind that sleeps on the floor with you in silent solidarity?

    Discuss.
    Quietly.
    Because Daddy’s finally asleep. On the decorative pillow.
    Like a hero.

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Real stories from a mom surviving small-scale domestic warefare–w/ snacks, sarcasm & snuggles.