From the very beginning, she was a child of love, raised in the warmth of a family that chose her, not by blood but by heart. For years, her past was a closed door, a chapter she never felt the need to open, content in the life she built with her six siblings—both biological and adopted. The mystery of her birth family was a distant echo, one she never sought to answer.
But fate, relentless and tender, brought her birth siblings to her doorstep after years of silence. Their mother’s death unlocked a story of regret and yearning, a bond waiting to be claimed. Suddenly, the sister she never knew existed was real, reaching out with hope and longing, forever changing the landscape of her identity and the meaning of family.

AITA for telling my birth siblings I feel nothing for them?
















According to Dr. David Schnarch, a marriage and family therapist known for his work on differentiation of self, this situation highlights a severe failure in boundary setting and managing ’emotional gravity.’ Schnarch emphasizes that healthy differentiation requires one to maintain their sense of self while engaging with others, especially when intense emotional demands are present. The self-identifier (32f) demonstrated strong differentiation by recognizing her lack of feeling and clearly stating her commitment to her adoptive family.
The biological siblings displayed a pattern of boundary violation and emotional entitlement, often seen in reunion scenarios where one party has spent years idealizing the relationship they feel was stolen. Their immediate dismissal of the individual’s existing family structure, labeling adoptive parents as ‘human traffickers,’ is a hostile projection of their own pain and unresolved loss onto the individual’s lived experience. This behavior shifts the focus from establishing a relationship to forcing compliance with their own narrative of what family ‘should’ be. The individual’s experience—feeling nothing upon meeting strangers—is a common and valid reaction to forced intimacy with genetic matches.
The individual’s actions of blocking and refusing to engage further after the meeting were appropriate for self-protection. When communication escalates to insults and fundamental rejection of one’s life choices, the relationship is no longer functional. A constructive approach for future boundary defense would be to issue one final, clear communication stating that the meeting confirmed the absence of a desired connection and that all contact is permanently terminated, without justifying the feeling or lack thereof.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.








It’s the same situation my in-laws have faced, 4 out of 7 kids are adopted (3/4 are biological siblings, and those 3 are 3/5, the remaining 2 of which were older siblings who were fostered out/raised with other guardians)
The 2 siblings came in contact with the adopted trio and had the same conversation happen in which they’re blood related are family etc.





The individual, raised in a loving adoptive home, experienced a sudden and unwelcome intrusion from biological siblings who expected an immediate, deep connection. This situation created significant conflict as the individual’s reality and emotional boundaries clashed sharply with the needs and aggressive claims of the newly discovered relatives.
Given the intense emotional demands and damaging accusations made by the biological siblings, was the individual justified in immediately shutting down all contact, or did they have a continuing obligation to manage the feelings of those who felt abandoned?







