In a home where love and shared passion for gaming once flourished, a fragile line was crossed that shattered not just a collectible figure, but the heart of a devoted collector. The carefully curated sanctuary, a room filled with memories and dreams, became the stage for a painful breach of trust, leaving her overwhelmed by the weight of disregard and loss.
As the delicate Violet figure lay broken, the emotional walls she had built to protect her treasures crumbled, revealing the raw vulnerability beneath. The clash between family bonds and personal boundaries ignited a silent storm, forcing her to retreat into solitude, grappling with the deep ache of something precious irreparably damaged.

AITA: Buying a glass case for my figures to prevent nephew from ruining them.
















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.”
The situation highlights a fundamental conflict in boundary setting, particularly when family dynamics intersect with personal property rights. The OP clearly communicated the status of the figures as collectibles that were not for touching. When the nephew, encouraged by the sister’s lax enforcement, violated this boundary and caused physical damage (breaking the figure), the OP’s subsequent installation of a locked display case was a direct, albeit extreme, reaction intended to enforce the boundary that had previously been disregarded. Jane and the mother interpret this action as punitive toward the child (“bullying”), whereas the OP views it as necessary protection for valued assets following previous negligence.
From a psychological and property rights perspective, the OP was within her rights to protect her possessions. The initial violation was minor in the context of property damage, but significant in the context of respect for stated requests. While purchasing a large, imposing case might heighten the visual impact of the restriction, it serves as an objective barrier. A more constructive approach for the future might involve clearer communication before the visit about what specific items are off-limits, perhaps moving the most fragile items entirely out of the game room during visits, rather than relying solely on a display case that the child perceives as directly excluding him.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.




















The original poster (OP) established clear boundaries regarding collectible figures which were violated by her sister and nephew, leading to property damage and significant emotional distress. Her subsequent action of installing a locked display case represents a firm response to enforce these boundaries after initial requests were ignored, resulting in criticism from her sister and mother who view the action as overly restrictive toward the child.
Was the OP justified in taking the definitive step of securing valuable, irreplaceable collectibles with a lock after a clear request was ignored and damage occurred, or did this action cross a line into excessively limiting a young visitor’s enjoyment? The core debate centers on whose needs—the collector’s need for preservation or the child’s desire for play—should take precedence in a shared guest space.







