Seventeen-year-old and living with her maternal grandparents, she has found peace and healing in the absence of her parents, especially her mother. Three years of silence have allowed her to grow stronger, both physically and mentally, away from the shadows of a painful past.
Yet, the past refuses to stay buried. Her aunt’s attempts to force reconciliation ignite fierce resistance, sparking a battle over boundaries and loyalty. Amidst the turmoil, she stands firm, determined to protect the life she has rebuilt, refusing to let old wounds reopen.

AITA for reminding my aunt that my mom would prefer to have an anorexic daughter than a “fat” daughter?





















As renowned psychologist Dr. Stephen Grosz explains, “When we don’t know how to handle our feelings, we often dump them on others.” In this case, the mother’s deep-seated insecurities regarding body image were dumped onto the daughter, manifesting as severe criticism and ultimately contributing to an eating disorder, while the aunt appears to be dumping the emotional labor of familial reconciliation onto the OP without fully acknowledging the trauma.
The OP’s history clearly demonstrates that contact with the mother directly correlates with mental and physical decline, exemplified by the regression of anorexia symptoms prior to moving in with the grandparents. The mother’s reaction to the OP’s recovery—calling the grandfather abusive for making the OP ‘fat’—is a clear indicator that the root cause of the conflict (the mother’s need to control the OP’s body) has not been resolved. The OP’s statement about their mother preferring an anorexic child is a painful but accurate articulation of the mother’s demonstrated priorities.
The OP’s actions in setting and enforcing boundaries were entirely appropriate for self-protection against documented emotional abuse. A constructive recommendation for the future is for the OP to maintain firm control over contact permissions, communicate boundaries clearly to all family members (including the aunt), and seek ongoing support to validate their perception of past events against external pressures to forgive or forget.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

























The 17-year-old OP is firmly established in a healthier life with their grandparents, following severe past trauma related to their mother’s body image fixation and the resulting anorexia. The central conflict arises when the maternal aunt pressures the OP to reconcile with the mother, ignoring the documented history of emotional and physical harm, which forces the OP to defend their necessary boundaries.
Given the mother’s continued pattern of toxic criticism regarding weight, even post-recovery, is the OP justified in maintaining strict no-contact boundaries, or does the familial obligation, as pushed by the aunt, outweigh the proven necessity for self-preservation?







