In a bustling household of eight children, a 17-year-old boy shoulders responsibilities far beyond his years, weaving love and duty into the fabric of his daily life. Among his siblings, some born of his parents, others adopted from a tragic loss, he stands as a quiet pillar, guiding them through school walks, homework, and extracurriculars, embodying a resilience born from family bonds and sacrifice.
As the family prepares to welcome a ninth child, the weight of unspoken expectations presses heavily on his young shoulders. His world, divided between the demands of chores and the yearning for freedom, tells a story of devotion, sacrifice, and the silent strength it takes to hold a family together when the walls are already bursting at the seams.

AITA for protesting my parents having more kids by not doing as many ‘chores’ as I did before?































As renowned psychologist and family systems expert Dr. Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy explained, “The give-and-take in a family system should be relatively balanced over time, but when one person is consistently asked to give more than they receive, it leads to cumulative injustice.”
The situation described clearly demonstrates a severe imbalance in family contribution, where the OP is functioning as an unpaid, under-age domestic manager and caregiver rather than a dependent child. The parents have established a pattern of outsourcing essential childcare and household maintenance to the oldest child, a dynamic often rooted in parental exhaustion or a lack of financial resources, though this does not excuse the exploitation. The OP’s emotional response—’exploding’ and subsequently ceasing all labor—is a predictable reaction to chronic emotional and physical overwork when boundaries have been ignored. His protest, while effective in stopping the labor, has created immediate crisis for the parents, who now face the consequences of years of deferred responsibility.
The parents’ attempt to induce guilt by invoking the suffering of the younger siblings and the supposed shame the OP’s protest reflects on the new baby is a form of emotional manipulation aimed at restoring the previous power dynamic. The OP’s actions were an appropriate, albeit drastic, assertion of self-preservation, but the blanket cessation of all help, including non-chore related sibling support, needs refinement. A more constructive future step would involve re-establishing clear, manageable boundaries in collaboration with school counselors or external support, clearly defining which tasks are age-appropriate for him versus tasks that must be absorbed by the parents or distributed among the other older, non-disabled siblings.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.




















The original poster (OP), a 17-year-old male, is overwhelmed by the extensive, unpaid domestic labor expected by his parents, which has increased significantly with the announcement of an ninth child. His refusal to perform these ‘chores’ resulted in immediate conflict, as his parents view his service as an obligation and a duty to his younger siblings, contrasting his stance with their expectations of gratitude and elder sibling responsibility.
Is the OP justified in completely halting his extensive domestic labor as a protest against his parents’ decision to have another child while heavily relying on him, or is he failing his ethical duty as an older sibling to support his younger siblings, even under unfair circumstances?







