At just seventeen, she carries a heavy burden that no teenager should bear—the relentless challenges of being the older sister to a brother with severe autism. His unpredictable aggression, fueled by the chaos of puberty and a mind trapped in early childhood, leaves her caught between fear and fierce protectiveness, dreading a future where the shadows of his struggles might linger.
Amid the storm of his outbursts and the weight of her parents’ unraveling marriage, she wrestles with a whirlwind of emotions—love, resentment, and a haunting fear of repeating these hardships in her own life. Her world is a fragile balance of pain and devotion, where hope flickers uncertainly beneath the strain of relentless adversity.

AITAH for not loving my autistic brother?










Dr. Liane Holliday Willey, an expert on adult Asperger’s Syndrome and social dynamics, emphasizes the difficulty in navigating relationships where neurotypical expectations meet significant behavioral challenges. The situation described involves extreme emotional labor placed upon a young person who is already facing the normal stresses of late adolescence.
The core dynamic here involves caregiver burnout manifesting prematurely in the sister. Her admission of hating her brother and wishing him gone is a manifestation of extreme psychological distress, not necessarily a permanent character flaw. The cumulative effect of managing a difficult, aggressive sibling alongside witnessing parental stress (the divorce, past health crises) has created an untenable situation. This is compounded by the guilt associated with holding these feelings, which acts as a secondary stressor. Her desire to leave for university is a healthy survival mechanism signaling that the current family structure is unsustainable for her mental health.
The narrator’s feelings, while intense, are a predictable reaction to prolonged, high-intensity caregiving demands without adequate external support. The appropriate action at this stage is focusing on self-preservation by setting firm boundaries around her impending departure. Constructively, she should seek confidential counseling to process the hatred and guilt, allowing her to reframe her relationship with her brother from one of unwilling caregiver to that of a future, occasional visitor, minimizing long-term relational damage.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.



You are not responsible nor wrong to have valid feelings to the situation and unfortunately the sibling you have.












The narrator is experiencing deep conflict, torn between the understandable desire for personal freedom and future independence, and the profound, guilt-inducing feelings of resentment toward her younger autistic brother. Her actions—planning an exit to university—are driven by self-preservation against overwhelming familial stress, which directly clashes with the societal and familial expectation that she should unconditionally love and support a vulnerable sibling.
Given the intense emotional burden, the severe family stress leading to parental divorce, and the narrator’s resulting distress, should her primary focus remain on ensuring her own emotional and physical safety by creating distance, or is there an ethical obligation to remain engaged and supportive of her brother despite her negative feelings?







