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AITA for telling my younger siblings being separated from them was the best thing for me?

by Michael Lee
October 28, 2025
in Aita
Reading Time: 7 mins read
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At just eleven years old, she was thrust into a fractured world where the innocence of childhood was overshadowed by the heavy burden of responsibility. Torn from the only family she knew, she became the reluctant protector of her younger siblings, carrying the weight of their pain and confusion as they clung to her like a lifeline amidst the chaos of foster homes and fractured trust.

Despite the efforts of therapy and the hopes for healing, the scars left by their past ran too deep, binding them in a painful cycle of dependence and rejection. Separated from her siblings under the guise of a temporary break, she faced the crushing loneliness of isolation, battling her own demons while desperately trying to hold onto the fragile threads of family that were slipping through her fingers.

AITA for telling my younger siblings being separated from them was the best thing for me?

When I (26f) was 11 my younger siblings and I...

We were placed in different foster homes together for a...

My siblings could only see me as mom and rejected...

They would physically attack our foster parents if they stepped...

I was growing more resentful by the day and there...

We were in individual therapy and family therapy but during...

It was suggested after a year that we needed a...

In that time I bounced around some before settling in...

When my siblings and I met up again it was...

Expecting me to mother them and refusing to let go...

My younger sister even broke my arm accidentally because she...

There was another period of no contact and then we...

We never got past that because they were still set...

Plus they had an extreme meltdown when they were told...

Even when I turned 18 I decided to focus on...

Last year they reached out to me after they all...

They wanted a relationship and I told them we'd need...

It's clear they still view me not as their sister...

I did this with the help of the therapist and...

But recently they have gone off on the fact we...

They wanted my thoughts on it for a while and...

They asked how I could see it any differently and...

Then I told them a couple of days ago that...

I told them I was sorry it was so rough...

They hate me for what I said and told me...

As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This quote highlights the core issue: the OP established a necessary boundary for self-preservation (the distance of being a sister, not a mother), but the siblings could not meet them at that relational point, demanding a merger of roles that was detrimental to the OP.

The siblings’ behavior—physical aggression toward foster parents, refusal to engage in therapy unless the OP was present, and later, blaming the OP for voicing their independent experience of the separation—points to complex trauma responses. For the siblings, the OP represented stability, and being separated felt like a second abandonment, reinforcing a narrative where the OP is responsible for their well-being. The OP, conversely, experienced the separation as a lifeline that allowed them to escape overwhelming emotional labor and begin healing from their own childhood trauma.

The OP’s action in stating that the separation was best for their healing was an appropriate, albeit painful, act of self-advocacy. While it provoked strong negative reactions rooted in the siblings’ trauma, maintaining the illusion of shared fault or denying their own need for that space would have ultimately eroded the OP’s hard-won progress. A constructive recommendation would be for the OP to continue therapy focused on navigating post-traumatic sibling relationships, potentially using the therapist to mediate discussions about their differing experiences of the past rather than engaging in direct confrontation about who was ‘right’ about the separation.

What do you think of this story?





THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.

kissofthesun_ Your feelings are valid, and you were honest about...

It's heartbreaking that the separation was necessary, but it seems...

While your siblings have a right to their own pain,...

You're not their parent, and it's okay to make that...

Creepy-Stable-6192 and continuing to insist on it is a wise...

Sounds like your siblings need individual therapy that they are...

bunnyangeeI you're not the a*shole.

You were a kid yourself, not their mom, and you...

You were honest, and they needed to hear it. It's...

TeslaTorah NTA because you went through an incredibly difficult situation...

needed space to heal.

You were forced to take on responsibilities no child should...

You weren't the one who put yourself in that situation,...

I can only imagine how hard it must be to...

It's okay to put yourself first when you've been through...

Big-Tomorrow2187 NTA... they asked you answered. They don't like it...

Because after 15 years they can't see how f**ked up...

grouchykitten1517 Honestly I don't know why you are even bothering...

they are I am a*suming grown a*s adults at this...

and they are insanely selfish if they can't see why...

Flimsy_Product_1434 NTA and I just feel really sad that none...

The original poster is caught in a difficult situation where their efforts to establish a healthy sibling relationship are constantly undermined by their younger siblings’ persistent expectation that the OP fulfills a parental role. The central conflict is the OP’s necessary boundary—insisting on being a sister—clashing directly with the siblings’ deep-seated need to treat the OP as the mother figure they lost in childhood.

Given the severe childhood trauma and the OP’s right to self-preservation and healing, was it appropriate for the OP to clearly state that the separation was beneficial for their personal recovery, or did this honesty cause an unnecessary and damaging rift by invalidating the siblings’ perception of shared victimhood?

Michael Lee

Michael is a tech enthusiast sharing insights on software development and gadgets.

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