From the tender age of two, he was cast into the shadows of a family gripped by fear and guilt, as his older brother battled a relentless blood cancer. While their parents poured every ounce of love and attention into that fight for survival, he learned early what it meant to be overlooked—left to the care of an indifferent uncle and busy neighbors, his childhood marked by solitude and neglect.
Years later, even as the cancer faded, the invisible wounds remained. The family never quite healed from the imbalance, and the bonds between them were fragile at best. Both brothers, shaped by absence and silence, struggled to find connection in a home where love was measured in attention given and withheld, leaving them to navigate a fractured relationship marked more by distance than closeness.

AITA for not doing everything to help my parents afford treatments for my brother?




















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This quote directly applies to the OP’s situation, where the need to establish personal space and emotional safety has led to a complete withdrawal from parental requests.
The core dynamic here is one of established emotional invalidation and subsequent self-protection. From early childhood, the OP was conditioned to believe their needs were secondary, reinforced by parental prioritization of the brother’s initial, life-threatening cancer and subsequent parental guilt. When the brother minimizes the OP’s feelings (calling them ‘dramatic’), it solidifies the OP’s perception that vulnerability leads to dismissal. The development of a strong bond with the grandparents serves as a necessary corrective measure, providing the validation the OP desperately lacked from their parents. Therefore, the OP’s refusal to participate in fundraising is not necessarily a rejection of the brother, but a firm, albeit reactive, boundary against further emotional exploitation by parents who only seek them out when a resource is needed.
From a psychological standpoint, the parents are engaging in transactional caretaking, expecting reciprocation only when their needs—paying for advanced treatment—become critical. The OP’s action, while harsh, is an understandable response to years of emotional neglect. A more constructive approach for the OP in the future would be to communicate clearly, perhaps through a mediator like the grandparents, stating that while they will not participate in fundraising, they are willing to offer support in ways that do not require deep emotional entanglement, such as providing an allowance from their existing job, thereby asserting agency without a complete shutdown of connection.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.
















































The original poster (OP) has built a life centered on self-reliance due to years of emotional neglect stemming from their brother’s long-term illness and subsequent parental focus. The central conflict arises when the parents, facing the brother’s recurrence, demand direct, tangible support (fundraising, employment) for this crisis, which directly clashes with the OP’s established emotional and physical distance from the family’s central narrative.
Is the OP justified in refusing to participate in the financial and logistical efforts for their brother’s current treatment, given their history of being sidelined, or do familial obligations supersede past neglect when a life is at stake? The debate rests on the tension between personal emotional preservation and the duty to immediate family in a health crisis.







