Ben’s world is a fragile balance between independence and vulnerability. Despite his outward appearance of normalcy, his cognitive challenges leave him exposed to dangers that others might easily avoid. The loneliness that haunts him drives him to seek connection in places that only deepen his wounds, revealing the heartbreaking reality of a mind caught between childhood and adulthood.
Caught between love and frustration, his sister faces a painful dilemma. She sees the man he strives to be but also the brother who needs protection. As her family looks to her for answers, she grapples with the limits of responsibility and the harsh truth that sometimes, love means stepping back even when the heart aches to hold on tighter.

My intellectually disabled brother has been sending thousands of dollars to women on the internet. AITAH for not caring and for not stepping in?










As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation perfectly illustrates the tension between setting necessary personal boundaries and the moral obligation to protect a vulnerable family member.
The OP’s brother, Ben, exhibits functional limitations that make him a prime target for financial exploitation, despite being legally an adult. The OP’s reluctance stems from caregiver fatigue and the knowledge that previous, direct interventions (like Max’s attempt) failed, suggesting that simple reasoning is ineffective against deep-seated emotional needs like loneliness. However, refusing to act entirely ignores the established dynamic where the family has historically managed Ben’s more complex needs. While respecting autonomy is important, when severe cognitive limitations prevent true risk assessment—as evidenced by sending thousands of dollars to obvious scams—the dynamic shifts from ‘adult choice’ to ‘vulnerability management.’
The OP’s refusal is understandable from a boundary-setting perspective but may be insufficient to prevent significant financial harm to Ben. A more constructive approach would be to redefine intervention away from direct confrontation (which failed) or total abdication. This could involve collaborating with the father to establish a mediated, third-party intervention focusing on financial literacy training or setting up external controls on Ben’s accounts, rather than placing the emotional labor solely on the OP.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

















The Original Poster (OP) feels exhausted from years of caregiving and firmly believes that as a 29-year-old adult, her brother Ben must face the consequences of his own financial decisions, despite his cognitive limitations. The central conflict is the OP’s desire for personal boundaries and relief versus her father’s expectation that she actively intervene to protect her vulnerable brother from being financially exploited.
Is the OP justified in prioritizing her own well-being and refusing to engage in an intervention for her 32-year-old brother, given his history of cognitive impairment and vulnerability to scams, or does her responsibility as a close family member override her desire for personal distance?







