She is a fierce mother, holding her world together with love and determination in the face of overwhelming challenges. Her 7-year-old son, diagnosed with autism, is her heart and soul, the reason she fights every day despite the loneliness left by a father who walked away when the road got tough.
But while she carries her son’s light, her own parents cast shadows with their harsh words, questioning her strength and love. Their suggestion to give up her child is a cruel blow, striking at the core of her identity and the unbreakable bond she shares with the boy who depends on her completely.

AITA for cutting off my parents after they pressured me to give up my autistic son for adoption?


















As renowned developmental psychologist Dr. Haim Ginott famously stated, “Honest communication builds trust, while dishonesty destroys it.” In this situation, the parents’ actions demonstrate a profound breach of trust by framing the OP’s child as disposable rather than supportive. Their consistent suggestions of adoption, research into care homes, and minimizing the OP’s role as a mother reveal a failure to validate the OP’s reality and her commitment to her son.
The core dynamic here is a severe boundary violation layered over parental expectations of what constitutes a ‘normal’ life for their daughter. The parents’ motivation appears to stem from anxiety about the difficulty of raising a child with autism, leading them to offer the most extreme ‘solution’—adoption—rather than offering practical, unconditional support. This behavior shifts the emotional labor onto the OP to manage their discomfort rather than supporting her existing structure.
The OP’s reaction to cut off contact, while emotionally intense, was an appropriate, self-protective measure to safeguard her emotional well-being and that of her son from further toxicity. A constructive path forward would require the parents to issue a sincere, unconditional apology focusing specifically on the harm caused by suggesting adoption, rather than focusing on their own ‘struggle.’ Future contact should be conditional upon them demonstrating genuine acceptance of the son as a full family member.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.




































The original poster (OP) is experiencing extreme emotional distress due to her parents suggesting she give up her 7-year-old son, who is on the autism spectrum, for adoption, framing him as a burden. The OP’s core conflict is maintaining her absolute commitment to her son against her parents’ repeated, hurtful suggestion that relinquishing him would be better for her life, leading her to sever contact.
Given the severity of the parents’ suggestion to place the child in care, is the OP correct to enforce a complete cut-off from her parents until they fully acknowledge the harm they caused, or is maintaining familial ties necessary, even if it requires accepting periodic, painful interactions?







