From a tender age, she bore the weight of loss and chaos that no child should endure. The death of her infant sister cast a long shadow over her childhood, soon overshadowed by her brother’s escalating turmoil—a storm of anger and destruction that tore through their home and stole the innocence of everyday life.
Her world shrank as fear and sacrifice became the norm: no friends, no celebrations, just a silent endurance of pain and isolation. Childhood joys were paused indefinitely, her milestones marked not by happiness, but by the harsh reality of survival in a home gripped by unrelenting struggle.

AITA for telling my parents I am not going to help them out ever again and they are now on their own?















As renowned family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner states, “When we say ‘no’ to the demands of others, we are saying ‘yes’ to ourselves.” This situation powerfully illustrates the long-term impact of unacknowledged emotional labor and the failure to establish appropriate boundaries during childhood, especially when a child is forced into a parental role.
The OP’s youth was hijacked by the need to manage a severely troubled sibling whose behavior was destructive and dangerous, all while the parents failed to adequately protect the OP or seek stable, professional solutions. The disappointment expressed by the parents regarding the OP’s caretaking failures further highlights a dynamic where the OP was held responsible for outcomes beyond their control. Moving out and distancing was a necessary survival mechanism. The parents’ current demand, made without apparent acknowledgment of past harm, triggers the OP’s trauma responses, making ‘no’ the only viable emotional response to protect their present well-being.
The OP’s action to refuse help entirely is understandable given the trauma history; however, it closes the door on potential future communication. A constructive approach would involve setting firm, specific boundaries based on professional care (e.g., ‘I will not babysit, but I can research three specialized respite care facilities for you to contact’). This validates their boundary while offering support channeled through professional, rather than personal, obligation.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.





























The original poster (OP) experienced a childhood defined by severe instability, parental neglect due to sibling caretaking, and the sacrifice of personal freedom and safety following a family tragedy. The core conflict is between the OP’s deeply ingrained need to protect themselves from further emotional harm and their parents’ current demand for their assistance due to the ongoing, unmanaged crisis with the brother.
Given the documented history of emotional and physical burden placed on the OP, is their refusal to provide any further care to their brother and parents justified as a necessary act of self-preservation, or are they acting unfairly by completely abandoning family members in extreme need?







