From the very beginning, the older sister cast a long shadow of pain and neglect over the narrator’s childhood. With a heart hardened by her own struggles and selfishness, she turned cruelty into a twisted form of attention, leaving scars that would never fully heal. The age gap couldn’t bridge the chasm of resentment and fear that grew with every hurtful word and action.
As the years passed, the sister’s destructive path spiraled further into chaos, leaving innocent children caught in the crossfire of addiction and abandonment. The family’s fragile bonds were tested by cycles of imprisonment and enabling, forcing the narrator to carry the weight of anxiety and mistrust. This is a story of fractured love, broken promises, and the haunting legacy of a family torn apart from within.

AITA for making my parents pay me to homeschool/tutor my nieces and nephews since they keep enabling my narc sister?















As renowned family therapist and author Dr. Terry Real explains, “When you keep paying the price for someone else’s choices, you’re not helping them; you’re enabling them and hurting yourself.”
The OP is currently sacrificing their own educational opportunities to provide consistent care and tutoring for five vulnerable children, a role effectively acting as a full-time caregiver and educator. This situation is exacerbated by the sister’s documented history of emotional abuse and drug dependency, combined with the parents’ enabling behavior, which reinforces the cycle of addiction by providing unconditional financial support without demanding accountability, such as rehabilitation.
The OP’s motivation to demand payment is rooted in self-preservation and a desire to stop enabling the dysfunctional family dynamic by placing a tangible, financial value on their significant labor. While setting boundaries is critical, the ultimatum (“pay me or I stop teaching”) poses a high risk to the children, as the parents have shown an inability to enforce structure or stop enabling the sister. A more effective approach would involve the OP clearly defining the scope of their *volunteer* duties (e.g., ‘I will watch the children, but I cannot take on formal tutoring’), while simultaneously demanding the parents redirect the $500 currently given to the sister directly toward the OP’s needs or formal educational expenses, framing it as a necessary investment in the competent caregiver already present.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.



































The original poster (OP) is experiencing significant emotional strain due to their sister’s ongoing substance abuse, narcissistic behavior, and the resulting instability impacting the care of five young children. The central conflict revolves around the OP’s reasonable request for compensation for the substantial, unpaid childcare and educational labor they are performing, set against the parents’ deep-seated pattern of enabling the sister through financial support and lenient rules.
Given the OP’s essential role in raising their nieces and nephews while sacrificing their own time and education, is their ultimatum—demanding payment or ceasing all tutoring services—justified, or does it unfairly abandon the children to the parents’ failing support structure?







