Betrayed by the two people she trusted most, a young woman faces the shattering aftermath of her husband’s affair with her own sister. The wound cuts deep, severing bonds that once felt unbreakable and leaving her to navigate a landscape of heartbreak and anger where family is no longer a safe place.
As her mother pleads for peace and togetherness, she stands resolute—refusing to pretend or forgive, unwilling to be part of a false harmony. In a world forever altered by betrayal, she chooses pain and isolation over the hollow illusion of a happy family.

AITA for telling my mom I’m not making her choose because I’m happy to be left out









As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” In this situation, the OP has established a significant boundary necessary for her own emotional survival following a profound double betrayal—the sister’s affair with the husband, who is now planning to marry the sister.
The OP’s motivation is self-preservation and maintaining dignity in the face of unforgivable relational violations. Her refusal to be civil or play nice is a direct reaction to the trauma inflicted by both parties. The mother’s perspective, while rooted in the desire to maintain traditional family unity, fails to acknowledge the depth of the OP’s justifiable anger and pain. The mother frames the situation as the OP making her choose, which shifts responsibility away from the sister and ex-husband who caused the rift. This dynamic often places pressure on the injured party to forgive or minimize their trauma for the sake of maintaining superficial family peace.
The OP’s action of cutting off contact is appropriate given the circumstances; enforcing boundaries against abusers or betrayers is a necessary step for healing. A constructive path forward for the OP would be to communicate clearly to her mother that while she respects her mother’s desire for family connection, her current boundary must remain firm, and that any future contact will depend on the sister and ex-husband respecting that boundary or taking accountability. If the mother continues to insist on shared events, the OP must be prepared to accept the consequence of temporary absence to protect her mental health.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.
















The original poster (OP) is dealing with profound betrayal after discovering her sister was having an affair with her now ex-husband, leading to a complete cut-off of contact. The central conflict arises because the OP refuses to attend family gatherings where her sister and ex-husband will be present, placing the mother in a difficult position by seemingly forcing a choice between her two daughters.
Given the severity of the betrayal involving both a sister and a spouse, is the OP justified in maintaining a zero-contact boundary with her sister and refusing family events that require her presence, or is she being unfair to her mother by making family cohesion conditional on excluding the sister and ex-husband?







