At just 17, he faced a betrayal so raw it shattered the fragile trust he held, unraveling the family ties that once seemed unbreakable. His world twisted when the girl he loved, his ex, revealed a secret pregnancy — not his child, but his brother’s — igniting a storm of anger and heartbreak that threatened to consume him.
Caught between the devastation of betrayal and the weight of responsibility, he struggled to hold onto his own sanity while his family fractured around him. Despite the chaos, his resilience shone through, grounded in years of sacrifice and hard work to support his struggling parents, even as their support now stood divided against him.

AITA for moving out at 17 when I was helping provide for my family because my brother got my (ex) girlfriend pregnant and my parents are supporting them?



















As renowned family therapist Dr. Terry Real explains, “Boundaries are not about controlling other people; they are about taking care of ourselves.” This situation highlights a severe boundary violation that extends beyond the romantic relationship into the entire family unit, specifically concerning the OP’s financial contributions.
The OP, at 17, took on significant adult responsibilities, essentially acting as an adult financial support system for parents who struggled. When the younger brother created a massive complication (fathering a child with the OP’s girlfriend), the parents’ reaction—supporting the brother and the ex while pressuring the responsible child (OP) to remain calm and supportive—constitutes emotional exploitation. The OP’s reaction, including moving out and cutting contact, is a radical act of self-preservation, drawing a line where the parents failed to do so. The family attempted to leverage the OP’s established ‘responsible’ identity against them (guilt-tripping), which is a common tactic in unhealthy family systems where one member is over-functioning.
The OP’s actions, while drastic, were an appropriate response to an untenable situation where their financial contributions were expected to cover the consequences of another sibling’s irresponsible choices, and their emotional boundaries were repeatedly crossed by parental pressure. Moving forward, the constructive recommendation is for the OP to maintain the physical distance established, perhaps through professional mediation via their grandparents, to define sustainable, long-term boundaries that separate their adult financial independence from their parents’ unresolved family dynamics regarding the brother.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.
























The original poster (OP) is experiencing intense emotional distress due to their brother’s actions and their parents’ subsequent support of the brother and the OP’s ex-girlfriend. The central conflict lies between the OP’s established role as a financial provider and caretaker—a role they feel exploited—and their parents’ expectation that the OP should forgive the betrayal and continue providing support despite the family structure being undermined by the brother’s irresponsibility.
Considering the extreme betrayal, the OP’s decision to create physical and emotional distance, while potentially extreme for a minor, was a reaction to a severe breach of trust. The question remains: Is the OP justified in completely cutting off familial support and contact to protect their own well-being, or does the relationship necessitate a level of understanding and reconciliation, even given the circumstances of betrayal and financial exploitation?







