Years of silence stretched between two sisters, once bound by blood and shared beginnings, now fractured by unspoken pain and abrupt departures. The sudden vanishing act of one twin left the other abandoned in a whirlwind of confusion and betrayal, a silence louder than any argument.
Behind closed doors, accusations and misunderstandings festered—words twisted into wounds, and a struggle for identity and acceptance tore their lives apart. What began as sibling rivalry spiraled into a chasm of heartbreak and resentment, leaving scars that neither time nor distance could easily heal.

AITAH for telling my mom that I don’t care if my twin is uninvited from Christmas Eve?
















Dr. Harriet Lerner, a clinical psychologist known for her work on family dynamics and boundaries, often emphasizes that standing firm against toxic behavior is necessary for personal integrity. In situations involving estranged siblings, especially when one party has engaged in public defamation and manipulation, the victim’s need to maintain distance is a valid form of self-preservation.
The OP’s twin demonstrated a pattern of externalizing blame (attributing depression to the OP’s success) and engaging in high-conflict behavior (falsely accusing parents of abuse, using slurs). This behavior, combined with continuing to take financial support while offering no reconciliation or apology, suggests a lack of insight and an unwillingness to take responsibility. The OP setting a boundary—refusing to force interaction or condone the twin’s presence by masking the issue—is a healthy response to perceived disrespect and emotional invalidation. The mother’s desire to smooth things over risks enabling the twin’s manipulative tactics by prioritizing short-term comfort over long-term relational health.
The OP’s actions were appropriate for maintaining their mental and emotional health given the severe history. A constructive future approach would involve the OP clearly communicating to the mother that while they wish to attend the event, they cannot be responsible for managing the twin’s reactions or consequences. If the twin chooses to be disruptive or absent due to their own actions, that outcome rests solely with the twin.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.















The individual in this situation is standing firm on established personal boundaries following years of estrangement and harmful actions from their twin sibling. The central conflict lies between the person’s need for self-protection and maintaining these boundaries, versus the family’s desire to maintain peace and normalcy at a shared holiday event, even if it requires the person to compromise their own feelings.
Given the history of unilateral withdrawal, public defamation, and continued financial reliance on the family, is the person justified in refusing to engage or alter their stance to prevent the twin’s potential exclusion from a family gathering, or does the desire for familial harmony outweigh the lack of accountability from the twin?







