Alan’s childhood was a battlefield where cruelty went unnoticed and pain was dismissed as mere childishness. As a boy, he endured relentless bullying—physical blows and emotional scars inflicted by peers—and faced the silent indifference of a family and community that failed to protect him. Each day, he carried the weight of isolation, the sting of neglect deepening with every ignored plea for help.
Years later, that suppressed anguish erupted in a classroom breakdown, shattering the fragile facade he had maintained. Though his parents belatedly sought to mend the wounds they once ignored, Alan’s heart had hardened, his spirit consumed by anger and resentment. Now, he stands defiant, a man scarred by the past, lashing out at a world that once turned its back on him.

AITAH for not convincing my brother to come back after he cut most of our family off for their complicity in his bullying?















As renowned psychologist Dr. Carl Rogers explains, “The only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to learn, the one who has learned how to adapt and change, the one who has realized that knowledge is never the same tomorrow as it was today.” This quote speaks to the necessary adaptation required from Alan’s parents in recognizing the long-term impact of their initial dismissive response to his childhood trauma.
Alan’s behavior—extreme anger, retaliation using personal tragedies as insults, and subsequent complete withdrawal from the family—is a classic manifestation of unresolved complex trauma stemming from prolonged invalidation. His initial bullying experiences were compounded by his family’s belief that it was merely ‘childish immaturity,’ which taught him that when he was in genuine distress, his primary support system would fail him. His subsequent explosion in high school and aggressive retaliation were defense mechanisms, attempting to regain control over a situation where he previously felt powerless. His current refusal to return home and limited contact are necessary, albeit extreme, boundary-setting actions to protect his fragile emotional state.
The family’s current pressure to ‘mend things’ is understandable given their realization of past mistakes, but it prioritizes the *family’s* need for reconciliation over Alan’s established need for safety. The OP’s family should cease direct pressure for reconciliation. A constructive approach involves respecting Alan’s current boundaries entirely. Future interactions should focus solely on low-stakes, non-demanding contact initiated by Alan, perhaps through the OP, showing consistent, non-judgmental support without demanding return or apology, which may allow trust to slowly rebuild on Alan’s timeline.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.































The original poster (OP) is caught between the family’s desire for reconciliation with their brother, Alan, and the knowledge that Alan harbors deep resentment and trauma from his past experiences. Alan’s current stance is one of complete rejection and self-imposed separation due to the perceived failures of his family and community to protect him during his bullying.
Given Alan’s established pattern of retaliation and refusal to engage, should the family continue to pressure him to return and mend relationships, risking complete estrangement, or must they accept his current isolation as the necessary consequence of their past inaction, prioritizing his current emotional safety over family unity?







