Growing up in a home where her dreams were dismissed and education was deemed unnecessary for a girl, she faced a world that underestimated her worth. Her parents’ indifference could have broken her spirit, but a quiet beacon of hope came in the form of her uncle Bryan, whose belief in her sparked a fire she would carry all the way to her dreams.
Defying expectations, she poured her heart into her studies, not for approval, but to prove to herself that she was more than the limitations imposed on her. With honors, a scholarship, and a new life on the West Coast, she found strength and happiness in her independence—while her brother remained tethered to the past, bound by obligations she refused to accept.

AITA for telling my brother that if my parents need money they can ask me for it themselves.










Dr. Harriet Lerner, a clinical psychologist and author of ‘The Dance of Anger,’ emphasizes that anger and boundary-setting are crucial tools for individuals to protect their self-worth. In this situation, the writer is using a clear financial boundary to challenge the long-standing gender bias of her parents. By refusing to let her brother act as a middleman, she prevents her parents from benefiting from her success while continuing to ignore her value as a female member of the family.
The brother’s behavior serves as an enabling mechanism, allowing the parents to receive financial support without confronting their past neglect or sexist beliefs. From a professional standpoint, the writer’s decision to set this boundary is appropriate and healthy for her emotional well-being. To manage this conflict moving forward, she should maintain her boundary without engaging in further circular arguments, leaving the choice to ask for help entirely up to her parents.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.





Stand your ground, it seems you are only asking for your parents to give you the respect you deserve. Your hard work has paid off and your parents should recognize that.



NTA



The writer experiences a deep sense of resentment due to her parents’ past refusal to fund her education based on her gender. She now faces a conflict between her brother’s expectation that she help support their aging parents and her own boundary, which requires her parents to directly ask for her financial assistance.
Is it justifiable for the daughter to demand that her parents swallow their pride and ask her directly for financial help, or should she put her childhood grievances aside to assist her family without preconditions?







