A family tradition meant to symbolize love and support has become a source of deep division. A parent’s promise to help each child buy a home at 22 was broken by a painful estrangement, leaving the third child feeling abandoned and resentful after years of silence and separation.
Now, as reconciliation begins, old wounds reopen with financial struggles and unmet expectations. The struggle to balance fairness, past mistakes, and present needs tears at the family’s fragile unity, forcing them all to confront what it truly means to forgive and move forward.

AITA for not helping my son buy a home?






According to Dr. Gail Saltz, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medicine, parental favoritism or perceived unequal treatment can severely damage sibling relationships and individual self-worth, even in adulthood. When a parent establishes a clear, conditional pattern of support (such as offering help at age 22), deviating from that pattern for one child while adhering to it for another can create profound feelings of inequity.
The parent’s motivation to treat the youngest child equally aligns with principles of procedural justice—the idea that the process used to make a decision should be fair. The parent views the third child’s entitlement as a loss of opportunity that occurred when the estrangement took place. However, the third child likely views the assistance not as a strict entitlement based on age, but as a demonstration of parental love and commitment, which they feel they missed out on due to the earlier conflict. This conflict highlights a clash between transactional fairness (following the stated rule) and emotional fairness (compensating for past loss).
The parent’s action to stick to the established rule for the youngest child was appropriate in maintaining consistency and honoring a commitment. However, moving forward, the parent should engage in a separate, direct conversation with the third child that acknowledges the past relationship breakdown and the subsequent financial strain, without promising the housing money. A constructive recommendation would be to offer non-monetary support, such as financial counseling or resources to help manage their current debt, to address the underlying stress without breaking the commitment made to the youngest.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

![[deleted] Without knowing how old the 3rd is or why...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/75e7187c72109690597b029c22704880.png)
Edit:
Found a comment, OP disowned 3rd for being a deadbeat dad. OP is helping to support the grandchild that was abandoned. OP is NTA












The parent is currently facing anger from their third child, who feels entitled to the housing assistance previously offered to the other children. The core conflict lies between the parent’s belief in maintaining established promises for the youngest child and the third child’s demand for retroactive fairness due to their previous estrangement.
Is the parent obligated to offer equivalent financial support to an adult child who missed the designated eligibility window due to past voluntary separation, or is the decision to prioritize the established tradition for the youngest child a firm and fair boundary?







