Eleven years of silence and unresolved pain defined the fractured relationship between a young man and his father, a chasm carved by betrayal and abandonment. Despite his father’s attempts at reconciliation, the wounds from infidelity were too deep, and the young man chose to sever ties, even at the cost of family unity and enduring pressure from relatives.
When tragedy struck, claiming both his father and the woman who shattered his parents’ marriage, the weight of responsibility unexpectedly fell on the young man and his wife. Faced with the care of his half-siblings—children born from the very betrayal he could never forgive—he stands at a crossroads, grappling with a legacy of hurt and the call to compassion.

AITA for not saving half siblings I have no relationship with from foster care?












As renowned family therapist Dr. Terry Erb, who specializes in estrangement and complex family systems, explains, “When significant relational trauma occurs, self-protection often necessitates establishing firm, sometimes permanent, boundaries. Re-engaging in these systems without addressing the original wound is rarely beneficial for the individual’s well-being.”
The OP’s refusal to take custody of his half-siblings, despite being capable, is a direct consequence of the prior emotional damage inflicted by his father’s actions and the subsequent family pressure. His decision serves as an ultimate boundary reinforcement against a family system that previously enabled or dismissed his father’s infidelity. The relatives’ current anger focuses not only on the well-being of the children but also on the OP’s perceived defiance of their collective narrative and expectation of familial duty, ignoring the OP’s own history of relational injury. The pressure exerted by the extended family—some of whom actively supported the father’s new relationship—represents an inappropriate imposition of emotional labor onto the OP, effectively demanding he clean up a situation created by the deceased parent he had already rightfully cut off.
The OP’s action of saying no initially, and then blocking those who continued to pressure him, was an appropriate act of self-preservation. While the situation involving the orphaned children is tragic, the OP holds no legal or moral obligation to sacrifice his own established peace for relatives who demonstrated selective concern. Moving forward, the most constructive approach is maintaining the established boundaries. If future contact is desired, it must be initiated by the OP under entirely different, safer terms, perhaps focusing communication only on the logistics concerning the children through a neutral third party, rather than submitting to the current emotional blackmail.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.















The original poster (OP) maintained a firm boundary against reconciliation with his father due to past infidelity, a stance that led to estrangement from his father and pressure from extended family. When his father passed away, the expectation from the family shifted to making the OP and his wife responsible for his newly orphaned half-siblings, a responsibility the OP refused based on the existing relationship history and lack of support from other relatives.
Given the deep emotional history and the conflicting duties felt by the OP versus the expectations imposed by his extended family regarding the orphaned children, the core question remains: Is the OP wrong for prioritizing his established emotional safety and boundaries over the perceived obligation to take on the care of half-siblings whose father was the source of his long-term distress?







