The narrator, a 28-year-old man, describes a difficult childhood shared with his older sister, Lily, who passed away recently. Their parents were very controlling and focused heavily on outward appearances, often being cruel privately. When Lily became rebellious, she left home at 18, cutting off contact with their parents, who then spread false rumors about her being mentally ill or a drug user.
The siblings secretly maintained contact, and Lily built a new, quiet life in another city. Before her sudden death last year, Lily made the narrator promise never to let their parents near her grave or memory, requesting an unmarked burial and absolute secrecy about the location. The narrator honored this wish, only informing his parents of her death weeks later. Since then, the parents have reacted with extreme anger, calling the narrator a monster and threatening legal action, leaving the narrator questioning if keeping his promise was the right decision.

AITA for refusing to tell my parents where my sister is buried?












As renowned psychologist Dr. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross stated regarding grief and loss, ‘The reality is that you will grieve. You will feel pain. You will feel lost. You will feel angry. You will feel empty. You will feel scared. There is no right or wrong way to feel, no good or bad way to grieve.’ While Kübler-Ross focused on the grieving process, her work underscores that the experience of loss is deeply personal and controlled by the individual experiencing it.
In this case, the sister, Lily, exercised her autonomy to dictate the terms of her death and burial, a final act of control against parents who historically controlled her life. The narrator is acting as the executor of her will, prioritizing her long-held boundary against the abusers. The parents’ reaction—labeling him a monster and making public accusations—demonstrates a sense of entitlement to their deceased child, ignoring the reality that they forfeited that right through their past behavior. Their claims of ‘being kept from graduating’ (presumably meaning closure or acknowledgment) are rooted in their own emotional needs, not in respect for Lily’s expressed wishes.
The narrator’s decision to uphold the promise was ethically sound, aligning with principles of respect for the deceased’s autonomy and protection from abusers. Constructively, in future disputes involving family members with complex histories, the narrator could benefit from establishing clear, external boundaries immediately, perhaps seeking counsel or documenting the sister’s wishes beforehand to present a united front against potential familial pressure or legal threats.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.














The core conflict rests on the narrator’s commitment to his deceased sister’s explicit final wishes versus his parents’ intense, albeit historically damaging, need to control the narrative surrounding their daughter’s memory and passing. The narrator feels obligated to protect his sister’s peace, even if it means facing severe public and familial backlash from parents who previously rejected her.
The situation forces a choice between honoring a sacred promise made in trust and navigating the parents’ overwhelming grief and entitlement. Is the narrator justified in prioritizing his sister’s autonomy and final request over his parents’ desire for closure and access, or does withholding the burial location cross a moral line, regardless of past abuse?







