Am I Overreacting by Setting Boundaries with My In-Laws About Our Child? #2

When I returned from a quiet anniversary weekend with my wife Natalie, her mother greeted us with a smile that felt overly proud. That’s when she casually announced they had taken our two-year-old daughter, Lily, to church and had her baptized without our consent. I stood frozen as I noticed a small necklace on Lily’s neck, a symbol of a ceremony I had never agreed to. On the drive home, Natalie insisted it was “just words and water,” trying to calm me. But to me, it felt like a decision about our child made without me as a parent.

Later, I learned it had not been an accident or misunderstanding. Natalie admitted she had been involved for weeks in planning the baptism with her parents and the priest, without telling me. She had chosen to hide it from me, saying she wanted to avoid conflict. The trust we had built over five years felt fractured. I felt excluded from one of the most important choices in our daughter’s life.

I told Natalie her parents could no longer care for Lily unsupervised, which led to arguments and tears. She apologized and said she had acted out of fear of disappointing her mother. But I struggled with the fact that she never considered how deeply it would affect me. We began sleeping separately, and I spoke with a lawyer to understand my rights as a father. I wasn’t sure if I wanted a divorce—but I knew things had changed.

Eventually, Natalie asked to talk at a quiet park. She said she still loved our family and wanted to rebuild what was broken. I explained that love alone wasn’t enough if trust had been replaced with secrecy. I couldn’t say whether we would stay married, but I knew we needed healing and honest communication, especially for Lily’s sake. As I walked away, I didn’t have all the answers—but I knew that moving forward required truth, not silence.