A young woman, juggling the relentless demands of college and two part-time jobs, finds her world shrinking under the weight of unpaid babysitting for her sister’s toddler. What began as a loving favor has spiraled into a draining obligation, forcing her to sacrifice precious study and work hours to care for a child she adores yet cannot afford to watch for free.
When she bravely sets boundaries, asking for a modest payment in recognition of her time and effort, she faces a harsh backlash. Her sister’s anger cuts deep, accusing her of placing a price on family love, leaving her torn between duty and self-preservation in a heartbreaking clash of expectations and survival.

AITAH for refusing to babysit my nephew because my sister refuses to pay me?














According to Dr. Terri Givens, who researches family dynamics and boundaries, ‘When obligations transition from occasional acts of support to consistent, essential services—especially childcare—the relationship shifts from mutual support to dependency, which requires re-evaluation and often, formalization.’
The central issue here is the violation of personal capacity and the normalization of free labor. The younger sister (OP) is experiencing significant emotional labor and opportunity cost; every hour spent babysitting is time lost earning income or studying, directly impacting her long-term stability. The older sister’s reaction—appealing to the ‘family doesn’t charge family’ maxim—is a common tactic used to deflect financial accountability by weaponizing guilt and love for the child. This pattern shifts the emotional burden onto the OP to justify her need for basic financial compensation.
The mother’s intervention reinforces a rigid, outdated definition of family duty that fails to recognize the OP’s adult responsibilities. The OP’s initial action of asking for a reduced rate was a reasonable attempt to negotiate a sustainable arrangement. Moving forward, the OP should firmly reiterate that while she loves her nephew, she cannot provide ongoing, scheduled care without compensation, framing it as a necessary condition for maintaining her education and employment, not a rejection of her sister.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.


If your mom feels that way, tell her that she should look after the kid. Its inconvenient? So what? She didn’t care when it was your life being affected.

Your sister needs to get her priorities in order you are not her free baby sitter you are family and family should help family the same way she should help you by paying you!!!!







NTA


The young woman is caught between her commitment to her demanding schedule of college and work, and the increasing, unpaid childcare demands of her single-mother sister. Her attempt to establish a necessary financial boundary was met with accusations of selfishness and a failure to prioritize family needs, creating significant emotional strain and guilt.
Should familial obligation automatically supersede personal financial stability and academic necessity when one family member relies heavily on the other for free, regular services? Is prioritizing self-support over constant, unpaid caremaking a selfish act, or a necessary boundary for personal survival?







