Beneath the fragile veneer of family loyalty, a devastating betrayal shattered the bonds that once held three sisters together. Jenna’s world crumbled when she discovered her husband Joe’s affair with her own sister Kate, turning love into heartbreak and trust into irreparable pain.
Caught in the crossfire of fractured relationships and divided loyalties, the youngest sister stood at a painful crossroads. Torn between the sister who was betrayed and the sister who became the other woman, she faced the agonizing choice of where her allegiance truly lay.

AITA for not supporting my sister after our niece/her stepdaughter talked badly about her publicly?


















As renowned relationship expert Dr. Harriet Lerner explains, “Forgiveness is a gift you give yourself, not the person who hurt you.” This quote speaks to the complex nature of family loyalty and personal boundaries following a significant betrayal.
The OP’s motivation is rooted in protecting her sister Jenna and affirming the boundary that Kate crossed by having an affair with Joe. By refusing to counsel Kate, the OP is enforcing the consequences of Kate’s actions within the family structure and signaling that her primary loyalty lies with the wronged party (Jenna). The dynamic involving Belle, the niece, highlights the depth of the emotional damage; Belle’s actions are an extreme manifestation of grief and anger directed at the person who broke the family unit, and Kate is now facing social consequences stemming from that initial infidelity.
The OP’s decision to refuse support is emotionally appropriate given the severe betrayal suffered by Jenna, and it is a valid exercise of personal boundaries. However, Kate’s assertion that she did ‘nothing to the OP’ ignores the reality that family alliances shift drastically after such events. A more constructive approach for the OP in the future, if she wishes to maintain minimal familial ties, would be to communicate clearly that support is available only for neutral topics, or to firmly reiterate that while she will not counsel Kate on the Belle situation, she acknowledges the reality of being related, thus setting a firm but minimally civil boundary.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

![[deleted] [removed] DoubleFlores24: NTA,](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/000535b7679f909aebccb673289c6e63.png)









The original poster (OP) clearly sides with her sister Jenna against her other sister, Kate, due to Kate’s past affair with Jenna’s husband, Joe. The central conflict is whether the OP has a duty to support Kate now that Kate is facing social repercussions from the extended fallout of her past actions, especially considering Kate’s claim that she did nothing wrong to the OP directly.
Is the OP justified in refusing to offer comfort or advice to Kate regarding the consequences of her affair being made public, or does the bond of sisterhood obligate the OP to offer support regardless of Kate’s past betrayal of Jenna?







