He carried the weight of rejection not just from strangers, but from those who shared his blood—a family that took him in only to withhold love and kindness, their grudges casting long shadows over his fragile childhood. That year spent under their roof was a torment far deeper than the years spent moving through foster homes, a painful lesson in how cruelty can wear the guise of kinship.
In a world where family is supposed to be a sanctuary, he found instead a battlefield marked by resentment and disdain, a stark contrast to the unconditional love he had hoped for. His story is a haunting reminder that sometimes, the ties that bind can also be the chains that break a child’s spirit.

AITA for telling my SIL and her husband that foster care is better than being taken in by family who don’t want you?





















Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, in ‘The Body Keeps the Score,’ emphasizes that consistent, reliable attachment and emotional safety are crucial for healthy development. While foster care presents systemic instability, the lack of authentic attachment within a biological family unit—especially one characterized by active resentment—can create a more pervasive sense of unlovability and internal fragmentation.
The original poster (OP) is projecting a very specific, valid trauma onto a new situation. The core issue is the difference between neglect/indifference and active hostility/resentment. When biological relatives take a child in due to obligation rather than desire, the child often internalizes the relative’s burden or anger, leading to profound attachment injury. The friend’s argument, while aiming to protect children from known foster care dangers, overlooks the severe, often invisible, emotional abuse present when care is given under duress by kin.
OP’s advice, while emotionally truthful to their experience, should be softened. A constructive recommendation is to validate the immense risk of kin placement without love, but to frame the decision around the *capacity* for relationship building, not just the biological tie. OP could have advised the sister-in-law and her husband to seriously assess their emotional bandwidth for adoption-level commitment, and if that commitment is absent, then exploring high-quality, specialized foster care might indeed offer a more emotionally neutral, and therefore safer, environment than a home steeped in resentment.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.

















The individual stands by their strong warning, rooted in deeply personal and negative experiences with resentful relatives, believing that unwelcome familial care can inflict more profound psychological damage than even difficult situations within the formal foster care system.
Is the psychological trauma caused by unloving biological relatives a greater harm to a child’s long-term development than the instability and potential neglect within the foster care system, or should the immediate safety net provided by any family member always be prioritized over the potential for emotional rejection?







