The original poster (OP), who is 21M, recounts his childhood experiences after his mother married his stepdad when he was six years old. At that time, the stepdad’s son, Harry (aged 7), developed an intense dislike for the OP because he was upset about his father dating the OP’s mother. Harry was consistently cruel to the OP, although the stepdad would try to correct the behavior.
The OP describes numerous severe instances of bullying from Harry, including property destruction, physical intimidation, and social exclusion, even escalating to an incident that caused the OP to lose a tooth. Despite the OP expressing misery and asking to move out, his mother insisted they remain a family unit. The OP eventually moved out for college, refusing to return home while Harry was present, leading to a confrontation with his mother about maintaining distance from Harry.

AITA for ignoring my mom and refusing to make nice with my stepdad’s son who bullied me throughout our childhood?




























As renowned psychologist Dr. Henry Cloud explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation starkly illustrates a failure to establish and enforce necessary personal boundaries during childhood, largely due to the parental figures prioritizing the new family structure over the safety and emotional well-being of the younger child.
The OP’s experiences detail a long-term pattern of psychological and physical abuse inflicted by Harry, which was enabled by the environment created by the parents’ insistence on forced coexistence. The mother’s response—telling the OP that he simply needed to tolerate abuse because they were a family—is a classic example of invalidation and prioritizing marital stability over child safety. The OP’s current reaction, complete avoidance of Harry and withdrawal from his mother, is a protective coping mechanism developed in response to years of unresolved trauma and a lack of accountability from the adults responsible for him. His resistance to reconciliation is a direct, albeit extreme, attempt to finally enforce the boundaries that were denied to him as a child.
The OP’s actions in refusing contact are appropriate given the severity and persistence of the abuse, and the late recognition of his trauma by his mother. Constructively, the OP should focus on maintaining his own mental health first. For future interactions with his mother, he could communicate that while he values her, any step toward repairing that relationship must involve her fully acknowledging the extent of the harm caused by not protecting him from Harry, without expecting immediate forgiveness or contact with the stepbrother.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.



























The central conflict revolves around the OP’s deeply held need to maintain strict boundaries against his abusive stepbrother, Harry, which directly clashes with his mother’s desire for familial unity and continued close relationships, including family gatherings.
The OP feels his mother failed to protect him during his childhood, leading him to reject reconciliation efforts, while other relatives suggest his stance is too extreme given the presence of a loving extended family. The question remains: Is the OP justified in completely cutting contact with Harry and causing strain with his mother, or should he compromise for the sake of family relations?







