A mother (OP) allowed her two adult daughters, who were struggling to find work and afford rent after college, to move into her home, which she shared with her young son, Tom. The daughters had a difficult history with the OP’s late husband, Robert, who passed away six months prior, and maintained a distant relationship with their much younger half-brother, Tom.
When the OP had an urgent need to leave the house, she asked her daughters to watch over the sick Tom for two hours. When Tom became ill again and called for help, the daughters allegedly ignored his texts and calls, leading the OP to discover they had read his messages but offered no assistance. Following this incident, the OP demanded they move out within a week, leading to an emotional confrontation and the daughters now giving her the silent treatment. The central question for the OP is whether her harsh ultimatum, driven by concern over their treatment of Tom, was the correct response to their neglect.

AITAH for giving my daughters one week to leave my house after what they did to their half brother?

















According to Dr. Avery Brooks, a specialist in family dynamics and boundary setting, “When adult children move back into a parental home, the terms of engagement must be explicitly renegotiated, especially concerning dependents, regardless of pre-existing relational history.”
The OP’s immediate reaction to demand the daughters move out stems from a powerful, biologically rooted protective instinct concerning her son, Tom. The daughters’ alleged intentional neglect of a sick child, regardless of their feelings toward their stepfather Robert or their own current housing instability, crosses a fundamental ethical line regarding the care of a minor dependent. Their reaction—arguing they were being asked to act as parents and then using the silent treatment—suggests an inability or refusal to accept responsibility for their actions in a shared household, which is a form of emotional manipulation to induce guilt in the OP.
While the daughters’ difficult history with Robert complicates the current dynamic, it does not excuse the specific failure to care for Tom when asked. The OP was right to address the neglect immediately, as it demonstrates a severe lack of empathy that directly impacts Tom’s safety. A less drastic, though perhaps less satisfying, initial path might have involved a structured discussion about immediate behavioral changes followed by a longer exit plan contingent on those changes. However, given the severity of the alleged deception (ignoring read texts), enforcing a firm boundary by requiring them to leave soon is a justifiable, albeit painful, measure to ensure Tom’s well-being.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.


















The core conflict lies between the OP’s protective responsibilities toward her young son, Tom, and the emotional expectations placed upon her adult daughters, who feel unfairly burdened while living under her roof. The daughters are reacting with denial and passive aggression (the silent treatment) to what they perceive as an unreasonable demand for parental-like care, contrasting sharply with the OP’s justified anger over their clear neglect of a sick child.
The debate centers on accountability versus familial obligation. Should the OP prioritize her immediate safety concerns for Tom, justifying the immediate eviction? Or, does the fact that they are adult, struggling guests necessitate a different form of boundary setting and conflict resolution, even given the severity of the neglect?







