She carries the weight of silence in a home bursting with chaos, an eighteen-year-old caught between childhood and adulthood. Living with her aunt and two wild, demanding cousins, she battles the overwhelming noise and relentless energy that threatens to drown her fragile calm. Her ADHD sharpens every sensation, turning simple hugs into crushing holds, and laughter into a storm of exhaustion.
Amid cramped spaces and constant chaos, she yearns for a moment of peace, a breath to reclaim herself. The relentless clinginess of a seven-year-old cousin becomes a daily trial, breaking down her defenses and testing her limits. This is a story of resilience, the struggle to find solitude in a world that never stops, and the quiet courage it takes to endure when every day feels like a fight for balance.

AITA for making my kid cousin cry because I wouldn’t let her hug me











According to Dr. Ross Greene, an expert in collaborative and proactive solutions (CPS) often applied to challenging child behavior, the cousin’s reaction stems from an unmet expectation: the expectation of immediate physical greeting. When this expectation is suddenly blocked (by the OP asking for space), the child lacks the necessary skills to handle the resulting frustration, leading to an emotional outburst.
The OP’s situation highlights a common dynamic in multi-generational or shared living situations: the clash between adult/older teen needs (boundaries, sensory regulation) and the established routines of younger children who rely on consistency. The OP, managing ADHD, requires proactive environmental adjustments, not just reactive boundary setting. The aunt’s initial validation of the OP’s feelings was positive, but immediately retracting that support when the cousin reacted emotionally (by telling the cousin, ‘Yes, she doesn’t want you hugging her’) unfortunately modeled that strong emotional reactions can override established limits. This teaches the child that boundary setting is negotiable under duress.
The OP was appropriate in asserting their need for space, as self-preservation, especially regarding sensory health, is paramount. However, future handling should involve proactive boundary establishment, potentially with the aunt mediating. Instead of waiting until the OP walks in the door, a plan—such as a visual cue or a designated ‘decompression zone’ for the OP for the first 15 minutes home—should be agreed upon by the adults. This meets the OP’s need for calm while providing the cousin with a predictable, albeit delayed, structure for interaction.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.

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The original poster (OP) is clearly struggling with sensory overload, particularly due to their ADHD, which is exacerbated by the constant, intense physical affection from their young cousin. The central conflict lies between the OP’s legitimate need for personal space and decompression time upon arriving home and the cousin’s deeply ingrained expectation of immediate, physical attention from the OP, which the aunt initially failed to enforce.
Given the OP’s stated needs and the impact on their well-being, was it justified for the OP to prioritize their sensory needs over the cousin’s immediate desire for physical interaction, even if it led to the cousin feeling rejected? How can caregivers effectively teach young children about respecting personal boundaries without causing significant emotional distress or the perception of outright rejection?







