The delicate balance of love and frustration weaves through the life of one young sibling watching her older sister navigate the world with autism and ADHD. While admiration for her parents’ efforts shines through, there’s a growing ache from feeling overlooked—a yearning for boundaries and respect that seem just out of reach.
Behind closed doors, the struggle surfaces quietly: a sister’s plea for dignity amid an environment where leniency blurs the lines of normalcy. It’s a raw testament to the sacrifices made in the name of care, and the hope that guidance might one day replace complacency.

AITA for telling my parents they are setting up my autistic sister to fail
















As renowned family therapist and boundary expert Dr. Henry Cloud explains, “Boundaries are not about controlling other people; they are about taking responsibility for our own choices and what we will allow in our lives.”
This situation highlights a classic tension between accommodation and necessary socialization, complicated by the sister’s diagnoses of Autism and ADHD. For individuals with these diagnoses, social norms can be genuinely difficult to grasp intuitively, making explicit teaching crucial. The OP correctly identifies that while tolerance at home is important, reaching age 18 without any guidance on situational dressing suggests a lack of preparation for life outside the immediate family unit. The parents, likely motivated by love and a desire to reduce immediate stress, have prioritized comfort over the long-term responsibility of teaching situational awareness. This leniency inadvertently creates a false sense of security for the sister regarding public or semi-public behavior.
The OP’s frustration, while valid, was expressed confrontationally during an argument, leading to defensiveness from the mother. While the OP’s core point about setting boundaries is sound, the execution regarding parental authority was inappropriate. Moving forward, the OP should focus on discussing the *risk* (e.g., safety from exploitation, social friction) with the parents during a calm period, perhaps framing it as preparation for adulthood rather than criticism of current parenting. A constructive step would be to suggest introducing specific, small boundaries (e.g., ‘Clothes required when non-immediate family visits’) and seeking a therapist specializing in neurodivergence to help the parents implement gradual, structured social skills training for the sister.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.



































The original poster (OP) is deeply conflicted, loving their older sister but feeling frustrated by their parents’ perceived leniency regarding the sister’s habit of being nude throughout the shared home, especially in front of guests. The central conflict lies between the OP’s belief that guidance and social boundaries are necessary for the sister’s future well-being and the parents’ preference for avoiding confrontation by accepting the behavior as harmless within the family setting.
Is the parents’ choice to allow the 18-year-old sister to be routinely nude in shared spaces a necessary accommodation for her neurodivergence, or is it a failure to teach essential social boundaries that risks her safety and future interactions outside the home?







