From the earliest days, a young boy’s life is shaped by the profound responsibility of caring for his older brother, Shane—a brother whose world is silent and whose needs are constant. Bound by love and duty, this 17-year-old has been thrust into a role few can truly understand, learning to navigate the delicate balance between childhood and caregiver.
Amidst the challenges of disabilities that silence Shane’s voice and limit his independence, the boy’s journey is one of quiet strength and sacrifice. His story is a testament to the unspoken bonds that hold a family together, where love is shown not in words, but in the tireless acts of care and compassion.

AITA for being resentful and angry that my parents had me so I’d take care of my disabled brother when they die?





















As renowned family systems therapist Dr. Murray Bowen explained, “Differentiation of self is the process whereby an individual increases his or her capacity to respond to the challenge of the life situation without sacrificing or suppressing any part of self.”
The OP’s situation is a classic example of a severely underdeveloped sense of self, heavily entangled with a filial responsibility that was imposed rather than mutually agreed upon. The parents, facing the daunting reality of Shane’s lifelong needs, effectively outsourced their parental duty onto their younger son by embedding the expectation of future guardianship into his identity from a very young age. This created an unhealthy triad where the OP’s existence was framed around Shane’s needs, leading to severe developmental limitations (social, educational, physical) and suppressed autonomy. The OP’s resentment is a natural, healthy psychological response to the violation of personal boundaries and the loss of a normative childhood.
The family’s reaction—anger at the OP for voicing feelings and the extended family’s cold shoulder—indicates a strong system alignment around maintaining the current dynamic, which protects the parents’ long-term plan but neglects the OP’s well-being. The OP’s actions in confronting their parents were necessary for asserting selfhood, even if the immediate outcome was conflict. Moving forward, the OP must prioritize differentiation. This involves seeking external support (counseling, educational resources) to build the life skills and academic standing they missed. The constructive recommendation is to establish firm, non-negotiable boundaries regarding their immediate personal development (education, social life) while simultaneously engaging in professional mediation to discuss Shane’s long-term care plan that involves equitable, formal support structures, rather than relying solely on an untrained, resentful sibling.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.





















The original poster (OP) expresses deep resentment and anger, feeling their entire childhood and future were sacrificed to prepare them to be the sole caregiver for their disabled older brother, Shane. The central conflict lies between the OP’s internalized duty, reinforced by parental expectations since childhood, and their emerging need for an independent life, personal development, and recognition as an individual separate from their caregiving role.
Given the OP’s expressed feelings of anger and the family’s unified defense of the status quo, the core question remains: Is it justifiable for parents to intentionally conceive and raise a child primarily as a predetermined, non-consenting caretaker for a sibling with high lifelong needs, even when the resulting emotional cost to the designated child is severe resentment? Should the OP prioritize their immediate emotional and developmental needs over the lifelong responsibility they were conditioned to accept?







