Torn between fractured loyalties and the aching void of a mother’s absence, two siblings navigate the cold aftermath of a divorce compounded by grief and silence. Their mother’s sudden withdrawal, masked by a plea to protect a sick child, leaves them adrift in a world where love feels conditional and connection fragile.
Years pass, but the wounds deepen as their mother remarries and tries to bridge the gap through screens and distant calls, only to be met with refusal and silence. The tragic death that should have united them instead cements the chasm, a painful reminder that some losses create barriers too vast to cross.

AITA for refusing to give my mom a second chance and cursing at her when she tried speaking to me?




















As renowned family therapist Dr. Carl Pickhardt explains, ‘The deepest wounds are often inflicted by those we are biologically or legally bound to love.’ In this situation, the mother’s actions—prioritizing a new partner’s crisis to the point of complete withdrawal from her existing children for years—represent a profound breach of parental responsibility and attachment. The OP and their sister were subjected to unpredictable emotional abandonment, culminating in an expectation to perform grief support for a child they barely knew, immediately after the mother resurfaced only when it suited her schedule.
The mother’s behavior following the death demonstrates a severe lack of insight and an attempt to shift responsibility. By blaming the OP for not attending the funeral and then demanding an apology for the OP’s valid emotional outburst, she avoids confronting the reality of her choices. The OP’s response, while volatile, was a powerful assertion of boundaries against emotional coercion. The pressure from the grandmother adds a layer of complexity, relying on obligation (‘she’s your mom’) rather than earned respect.
The OP’s aggressive reaction was an understandable defense mechanism against long-term neglect, but future interactions require more structured boundaries. The professional recommendation is for the OP to maintain distance until the mother can demonstrate accountability that goes beyond superficial apologies—specifically, by acknowledging the abandonment without using the deceased child as justification. The OP does not owe an apology for protecting their emotional space.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


























The original poster (OP) is experiencing a significant conflict stemming from years of emotional absence by their mother following a divorce. The central issue is the mother’s expectation of immediate reintegration and forgiveness, contrasted with the OP’s justifiable anger and refusal to accept her excuses regarding the abandonment during a crisis involving her new family.
Given the mother’s recent attempts to enforce contact through legal means and her current demand for an apology, the core question remains: Should the OP apologize for aggressively rejecting their mother’s manipulative attempts at reconciliation, or are the OP’s firm boundaries, despite the harsh delivery, a necessary defense against years of neglect and a current lack of genuine accountability?







