From the earliest memories of a fractured family, the shadows of betrayal and pain loomed large. A father’s unfaithfulness shattered the fragile bonds of love, leaving a mother to pick up the pieces as she fought to protect her child from the chaos that followed.
Years of turmoil unfolded—arrests, abandonment, and the silent suffering of children caught in the crossfire. Amidst the wreckage, a child watched helplessly as the family they once knew crumbled, hoping for a glimpse of healing that seemed ever out of reach.

AITA for calling my grandparents failures as parents, grandparents and people when they blamed my mom for my dad’s kids going into foster care?























As renowned psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner explains, “The problem is not that we have boundaries, but that we often have weak boundaries or no boundaries at all.” In this situation, the OP is clearly establishing a boundary regarding who is responsible for the well-being of the half-siblings: the biological parents and the grandparents who initially took custody. The conflict arises because the grandparents are attempting to impose their boundary—that the OP’s mother held a moral obligation to absorb the trauma of her ex-husband’s subsequent family—onto the OP and the OP’s mother.
The core issue is the misattribution of responsibility. The OP’s father initiated the crisis through infidelity and violence. His second wife abandoned the children, transferring the duty to the OP’s grandparents. The grandparents then attempted to offload that duty onto the OP’s mother, who had already separated from the source of instability. The OP correctly identifies that the primary duty lay with the individuals who perpetuated the family structure (father, mistress/second mother, and the grandparents). The grandparents’ accusation that the OP lacks empathy may stem from their own discomfort in facing their failure to properly raise their son and care for their grandchildren.
The OP’s actions in defending their mother were appropriate within the context of protecting their immediate family unit from unwarranted external blame rooted in historical family failures. A constructive recommendation for the future would be for the OP to limit discussions with the grandparents strictly to factual, low-emotion topics, or to cease communication entirely until the grandparents cease attacking the OP’s mother. Emotional labor should not be spent trying to convince fundamentally biased parties of objective accountability.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


















The original poster (OP) is facing intense emotional pressure from their grandparents, who are blaming the OP’s mother for the trauma experienced by the OP’s half-siblings in foster care. The OP strongly defends their mother, asserting that the responsibility for those children rested with their direct family members, not the OP’s mother. This conflict highlights a deep division in how the OP and their grandparents view accountability and parental responsibility following the father’s destructive actions.
Given the history of severe parental failure by the OP’s father and the grandparents’ refusal to take responsibility, is the OP justified in protecting their mother from blame, or did their defense of their mother demonstrate a lack of empathy toward their half-siblings’ suffering, as the grandparents allege?







