In the quiet sanctuary of their home, a family blossomed through love and hope. A couple in their late 30s, seasoned foster parents with three young children, opened their hearts to a little boy who became more than just a foster child—he became their son, their brother, their heart. For years, they nurtured him with unwavering devotion, dreaming of the day they could make their bond permanent.
But just as the promise of adoption began to shine on the horizon, fate cruelly intervened. The fragile threads holding their family together were abruptly severed when the case worker tore the boy from their embrace. In an instant, the love and dreams they had woven were shattered, leaving a family fractured and a child torn from the only home he had ever known.

AITA for not personally telling my SIL my husband and I have decided to stop fostering?





















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a profound clash between professional duty, personal trauma, and relational expectations. The OP’s decision to cease fostering was a direct, trauma-informed response to a systemic failure—the system disregarded the established bonds and the child’s emotional well-being during the adoption process, resulting in devastating heartbreak for the entire family unit.
The caseworker’s decision to prioritize an abstract ideal (“parents who did not have any children”) over a concrete, established attachment structure demonstrates a failure in understanding developmental psychology regarding attachment. The OP’s subsequent decision to stop fostering is entirely appropriate; it establishes a necessary boundary to protect the existing children from repeated, severe emotional injury caused by external, unpredictable factors. The OP’s obligation is primarily to the welfare of her immediate family, which she acted upon.
Regarding the conflict with the SIL, while the SIL’s reaction is understandable given her background as a foster child—perhaps seeing the OP’s decision as abandoning a cause she passionately supports—the OP was not obligated to manage the SIL’s feelings before ensuring her own family processed the grief. A constructive recommendation for the future would be for the OP to use ‘I’ statements when explaining the boundary decision to the SIL: “I understand why you are upset about how you heard the news, but given the trauma our family just experienced, I needed time to process before sharing details about our decision to stop fostering.”
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.

























The original poster (OP) and her husband experienced profound emotional trauma after a foster son, whom they were actively adopting, was suddenly removed and placed with another family based on a caseworker’s new assessment. This unexpected removal, despite the child’s deep attachment to their existing family, led the OP to stop fostering to protect their biological children from similar heartbreak. The central conflict now lies between the OP’s necessary self-preservation and boundary setting for their family’s well-being, and the external expectation, voiced by the sister-in-law (SIL), that the OP should have managed personal disclosure about this decision out of respect for the SIL’s personal history.
Was the OP an ‘asshole’ for prioritizing her family’s emotional safety over maintaining a specific disclosure protocol with a family member, especially when the decision to stop fostering was rooted in a traumatic professional failure? Or, does the SIL’s reaction, stemming from her own experience as a foster child, justify her demand for direct communication regarding such a sensitive topic?







