The internet has spent years dissecting the pipeline that turns impressionable young men into self-proclaimed “high value males” who blame women for everything wrong in their lives. It usually starts with a podcast, then a forum, then a whole personality built around resentment.
One mother is living that nightmare in real time. Her ex-husband dove headfirst into a world of incel ideology that he has been happily passing along to their fifteen-year-old son like it’s some kind of inheritance. She is watching the boy she raised disappear in front of her, and she is desperately looking for a way to pull him back.
More info: Reddit
The manosphere pipeline has been pulling in young men for years, and it is getting harder to ignore just how far its reach has grown

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Four years ago, a mom divorced her husband for cheating, and he responded by deciding the real problem was her and every woman like her




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He declared himself a high-value male, started listening to the podcasts, and made sure his fifteen-year-old son heard every single word of it




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His daughter heard it too, decided it was ridiculous, and shut him down completely, but his son heard it and thought his father had a point


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The mom went to court to make him stop, the court said his comments were not harmful, and she went home to a son who no longer thinks she is worth listening to
One mother ended her marriage after her husband cheated on her. Rather than take any accountability, he decided the real problem was her. He claimed she had cheated first, demanded a paternity test for both children, said he only strayed because she was “used up,” announced he had “let herself go,” and declared himself a high-value male in need of a more devoted woman.
The ideology did not stay in his apartment. He brought it home to his kids every single week, fifty percent of the time, right on schedule. His daughter, who is twelve and apparently already done with this world’s nonsense, heard it, clocked it, and shut him down completely. His fifteen-year-old son, unfortunately, heard it and thought it sounded about right.
The son has since been reprimanded multiple times at school for making misogynistic comments to girls and female teachers, banned from online gaming for the things he was saying to women, and now openly identifies as an incel. He does not respect his mother or his sister because they are female. The mother even went to court to try to force the father to stop.
So here she is. The courts have shrugged, the ex is actively sabotaging every intervention, and her son is not interested in hearing anything she has to say because she is, in his current worldview, not worth listening to. She came to the internet asking how to pull her son back from the edge, and the responses came flooding in fast.

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Let’s be very clear about something: this did not start with a fifteen year old boy deciding on his own that women were the enemy. According to therapist Steven Ing MFT, the incel pipeline almost always begins with a boy who feels isolated, unsupported, and invisible, and then finds a community online that finally makes him feel seen.
The difference in this particular case is that the community did not find him on the internet. It was handed to him by his father over dinner, which is somehow so much worse. The manosphere did not need an algorithm to reach this kid. It had a key to the front door.
And the manosphere is not a small or fringe phenomenon anymore. According to Forbes, it is a sprawling network of websites, forums, and podcasts promoting hyper-masculinity. A global study of 23,000 people found that young men today actually hold more repressive attitudes toward gender equality than older generations, and a third of Gen Z men believe wives should obey their husbands.
Family lawyers are increasingly reporting that manosphere ideology is showing up directly in custody cases, with fathers framing mothers as the enemy, dismissing physical harm allegations as feminist myths, and using parental alienation claims as weapons.
Legal experts say that courts can order psychological evaluations or mandatory therapy and even modify custody arrangements when a parent is actively undermining the other’s relationship with the children. This mother tried exactly that and the court decided the comments were not harmful enough to intervene. The bar, apparently, is not very high.
The hard truth is that this mother is fighting on every front simultaneously and at least one of those fronts, the court system, has already waved her through without backup. What the research does make clear is that pushback and punishment tend to reinforce these ideologies rather than dismantle them, and that the window for intervention gets smaller the longer it goes on.
What do you think this mother should do? Share some advice in the comments!
The internet showed up for this one with a flood of responses, and the advice, the anger, and the support came pouring in from every direction







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