The original poster (OP) describes a severe conflict with their brother regarding lifestyle choices, specifically the OP’s legal cannabis use versus the brother’s strict sobriety. The brother had allegedly made repeated threats over the past three months to call Child Protective Services (CPS) because he disapproved of the OP’s parenting methods.
The situation escalated last Sunday when a social worker contacted the OP, initiating a welfare check based on these complaints. While the caseworker ultimately found the claims entirely unfounded, the OP discovered the source of the call when the brother, upon walking in while the OP was discussing the event with family, admitted to making the report. This led to an immediate and intense confrontation where the OP ordered the brother and his wife to leave, causing the OP significant emotional distress afterward.

AITAH for not wanting to accept my brother’s apology after he lied to CPS.















As renowned family therapist Dr. Susan Forward explains, “When someone uses threats or sabotage to control you, it’s a profound betrayal of trust that demands a serious response to reestablish healthy boundaries.”
The brother’s actions move beyond simple disapproval of lifestyle; making a malicious, false report to CPS against a sibling constitutes a severe form of emotional abuse and punitive control. This behavior suggests the brother felt entitled to enforce his moral standards on the OP’s life, using the legal system’s mechanism (CPS) as a weapon. The fact that he admitted to it so casually upon confrontation indicates a lack of accountability or perhaps a minimization of the severe consequences (parental scrutiny, emotional trauma) his actions caused. For the OP, reacting with immediate exclusion and emotional withdrawal was a natural self-protective response to a perceived existential threat to their family unit.
The OP’s actions in demanding they leave were appropriate given the severity of the breach—they successfully enforced a critical boundary. Moving forward, the OP should prioritize their mental health and the stability of their children. A constructive recommendation would be to maintain the current distance until the brother and his wife offer a genuine, unqualified apology that acknowledges the specific harm caused by the false report, not just the resulting anger. Any future interaction must be conditional upon a proven commitment to respecting the OP’s autonomy and parenting decisions.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.















The OP is currently experiencing intense anger and a complete breakdown of trust with their brother, leading to extreme protective measures, such as locking the doors 24/7. The central conflict lies between the OP’s right to parent without interference and the brother’s belief that his moral judgment justifies reporting the OP to authorities, even falsely.
With the CPS case closed and evidence showing the report was baseless, the core question remains whether the brother’s actions warrant the OP’s current unforgiving stance, or if the familial relationship can or should be salvaged despite this serious breach of trust. Should the OP grant forgiveness for the malicious report, or is this betrayal too significant to overlook?







