A young man’s life was irrevocably altered when his mother suffered a stroke and his father passed away, leaving him as the sole caretaker. At just 28, he sacrificed his graduate studies and personal aspirations, shouldering the overwhelming responsibility of tending to his ailing mother as her memory faded and her needs grew more demanding.
Despite the mounting stress and exhaustion, his older siblings remained distant, wrapped in their own lives and families, leaving him isolated in his struggle. Now, as the holidays approach, the burden of care and the weight of unspoken resentments come to a head, revealing the painful cost of love and duty when family bonds fray under pressure.

AITA for “ruining” the Holidays due to placing our mom in LTC?



















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.”
This situation powerfully illustrates a breakdown in shared family responsibility and the establishment of unhealthy caregiving roles. The OP, at a young age, assumed the role of primary caregiver, sacrificing graduate studies, which suggests a profound sense of obligation or perhaps a lack of clear boundaries initially set with the siblings. When the OP began showing signs of burnout, the siblings failed to recognize or respond to the distress signals, relying on the OP’s established competence to manage everything. The sibling’s defense—that the OP should have explicitly asked for help—ignores the implicit social contract often present in family crises, where the person most available (the OP, living locally) is expected to manage. Furthermore, the siblings only engaged when the OP instituted a boundary (taking a vacation), shifting the burden back to them, at which point their excuses revealed a preference for avoidance over shared effort.
The OP’s eventual outburst, while emotionally charged, was a necessary confrontation to validate the immense, unacknowledged labor performed over years. While directly asking for help is often constructive, expecting siblings who have demonstrated historical non-involvement to suddenly become engaged for holidays reveals a misjudgment of their willingness to participate. Moving forward, the OP should formalize future care plans with clear deliverables assigned to each sibling, rather than assuming they will either step up or remain uninvolved. If siblings cannot commit to travel or care responsibilities, the OP must prioritize their own well-being by securing professional respite care for the mother during vacation periods, rather than relying on the siblings’ inconsistent participation.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.






















The original poster (OP) feels deeply resentful because they sacrificed their education and personal life to provide consistent, demanding care for their mother following a stroke, a burden the siblings avoided. The central conflict arises when the OP decides to take a necessary vacation, leading the siblings, who had previously offered no support, to suddenly condemn the OP as selfish for not ensuring their mother’s holiday visits.
Is the OP justified in setting firm boundaries and refusing to facilitate their mother’s holiday visits when the siblings refuse shared responsibility, or should the OP prioritize being the sole caregiver facilitator simply because they were the one who initially stepped up?







