Anticipation filled the air as a couple prepared to welcome their first child through surrogacy, a journey marked by hope and joy. Yet amidst the excitement, a fragile tension simmered between two sisters, each navigating the profound and deeply personal experience of impending motherhood in very different ways.
What was meant to be a shared celebration slowly unraveled as the sister’s unspoken struggles and silent frustrations clashed with the other’s eager optimism. The gap between their emotions grew, revealing the complex and often unseen challenges that lie beneath the surface of pregnancy and family bonds.

AITA for trying to bond with my pregnant sister during my surrogacy journey?







Dr. Harriet Lerner, a clinical psychologist known for her work on boundaries and family relationships, often emphasizes the importance of recognizing and respecting the specific emotional realities of individuals. In this situation, the conflict centers on differing forms of emotional labor and validation. The original poster (OP) is operating from a place of high excitement and a desire to bond over shared parenthood timing. However, their attempts to motivate the sister by focusing solely on the positive outcome (‘you’ll have a baby in your arms’) inadvertently invalidate the sister’s current negative experience (sore back and ankles).
The sister’s reaction suggests a need for validation regarding her present struggle, rather than a need for comparison or future-focused motivation. When she stated the OP could never understand what she is going through, she was likely establishing a boundary around her own physical reality. While the OP’s experience (surrogacy) is also challenging, it does not mirror the physiological experience of pregnancy. This is a common dynamic where individuals going through intense, unique physical/emotional experiences feel misunderstood when others try to equate their struggles.
From a professional standpoint, the OP was not entirely ‘wrong’ in their intent to encourage, but their execution lacked nuance. A more effective approach would have been to listen actively and validate the sister’s pain first, without immediately pivoting to advice or comparison. For example, responding with, ‘I hear you, dealing with pain like that sounds exhausting,’ before acknowledging the shared future event. Moving forward, the OP should focus on empathetic listening rather than problem-solving or reframing the sister’s discomfort.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

You’re downplaying and dismissing her complaints right to her face. Of course she doesn’t appreciate that. “Oh it’s all worth it” she doesn’t want to hear that! She wants some sympathy and to vent.


You’re invalidating her experiences, emotions, and pain.



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Stop doing this.
The original poster is experiencing difficulty reconciling their excitement for their impending parenthood with their sister’s expressed discomfort during pregnancy. The core conflict arises from a clash between the poster’s supportive but seemingly dismissive advice and the sister’s feeling that her unique physical and emotional experience is being minimized.
Given the different paths to parenthood involved, is the poster justified in feeling hurt when their attempts to offer encouragement are rejected, or was the sister correct in asserting that the poster cannot truly understand the unique physical reality of her pregnancy experience?







