The user, a 25-year-old female, describes a history of a difficult relationship with her older sister, who has traditionally been viewed by the family as the more successful sibling. The user acknowledges taking a different life path, including career struggles, in contrast to her sister’s seemingly perfect life.
During a recent family dinner announcing a vacation, the sister made several disparaging comments, calling the user the “family failure” but adding that she was “fun to have around.” Although others laughed, the user felt deeply disrespected and subsequently informed her parents that she would not attend the planned trip. Now, the family is upset, with the sister calling her “dramatic” and the parents urging her to attend and ignore the insults, leaving the user feeling guilty about her decision.

AITA for refusing to go on a family trip after my sister called me ‘the family failure’?










As renowned relationship expert Dr. John Gottman states, “The best possible thing you can do for your relationship is to have a good relationship with yourself.” This principle is highly relevant here, as the user is attempting to prioritize her own sense of self-worth over immediate familial appeasement.
The sister’s behavior, characterized by repeated, demeaning jokes that everyone else laughs at, suggests a pattern of boundary violation and potentially a dynamic where the user’s low self-esteem is reinforced by the group. When the family dismisses the user’s feelings by saying the comments were “just joking,” they are engaging in invalidation, which minimizes the emotional labor and harm caused to the user. The user’s decision to decline the trip functions as a necessary, albeit conflict-inducing, act of self-advocacy and boundary setting.
The user’s actions were appropriate as a means of stopping the cycle of disrespect. A constructive recommendation for the future would be to address the pattern of comparison and insults directly with both parents and the sister in a calm, non-reactive setting, focusing on ‘I feel’ statements rather than accusations. If this pattern persists, maintaining distance, even physical distance like skipping the trip, remains a valid tool for emotional preservation.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.














The user is currently facing guilt and pressure from her family after setting a boundary against attending a vacation due to repeated disrespect from her older sister. The central conflict lies between the user’s need to protect her self-respect following hurtful comments and the family’s expectation that she should prioritize group harmony by attending the event despite the emotional cost.
The core question is whether the user was justified in refusing the family trip as a necessary response to ongoing verbal mistreatment, or if her refusal was an overreaction that unfairly punishes the rest of the family. Readers must weigh the value of enforcing personal boundaries against the desire to maintain familial peace.







