AITA My sister in law told me that my mother had died when she hadn’t and I refuse to forgive her?

Finding out a parent has died is the kind of moment that splits life cleanly into before and after. For one person on social media, that moment came through a phone call from a sister-in-law, delivered bluntly and without warning, after hours of being unreachable at work. The words hit hard, leaving no room for hope, context, or explanation. What followed was shock, panic, and a desperate rush to the hospital.

At the same time, the truth waiting there was far more complicated, and in some ways, even more painful. As the full picture unfolded, grief collided with anger, and a single sentence spoken too soon became impossible to forget. The community quickly jumped in, split between sympathy, skepticism, and dark humor, all trying to answer the same question: when grief and confusion collide, who is really at fault?

AITA My sister in law told me that my mother had died when she hadn't and I refuse to forgive her?

Everything started with an unsettling flood of missed calls after hours without phone access

I work on a site which requires no chance of sparks due to the nature of the business so all phones are locked away. About eight weeks ago, I got...

in the time since dinner, I had received thirteen calls and voicemails and a lot of WhatsApp messages asking me to contact my brothers.

Confusion quickly turned into terror after finally reaching the one person available

After ringing the missed calls and trying to get an idea of what was wrong, I got hold of my sister in law who told me that my mother had...

I was totally in shock. I tried contacting my brothers who were at the hospital but reception there was very poor.

The hospital scene only deepened the emotional whiplash

When I finally got to the hospital (almost two hours later due to distance and traffic) I finally found my mother and brothers in ICU which I thought was strange.

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They were behind curtains and I noticed that my mother had oxygen being pumped into her and asked my brother about it and was told it was a comfort thing.

Reality hit in a way the poster never could have expected

Next thing that happened was my mother slowly moving her hands. I nearly jumped out of my skin thinking that my mother was a zombie coming back to life.

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After being calmed, I was told that her vital signs began dropping at the end of the operation and the decision was made to withdraw life support because my brothers...

The anger lingered long after the loss itself

I spent the next day in the hospital watching her slowly die while seething about being told a massive lie. At the funeral, my sister-in-law walked up and said she...

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I politely told her that I wasn't in the mood. On my way out of the wake, I shook everyone's hand except hers and it upset her. So am I...

From a psychological standpoint, the poster’s reaction makes sense. Being told a loved one has already died creates a finality that the brain locks onto immediately. According to Dr. John Gottman of The Gottman Institute, “In moments of extreme stress, the nervous system goes into survival mode, and people remember emotional information more intensely and for longer periods.” That first message became the emotional truth, even after reality corrected it.

Looking from the sister-in-law’s side, the situation appears rooted in confusion rather than cruelty. Medical decisions around life support are widely misunderstood, often shaped by television portrayals where death follows instantly. In a chaotic hospital environment filled with grief, it is plausible she believed she was communicating the outcome, not a prediction.

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Where the real damage occurred was the lack of clarification later. Once it became clear the mother was still alive, even briefly, correcting the message could have softened the emotional blow. Silence allowed resentment to grow, filling the space where understanding might have lived.

For families facing medical crises, experts consistently recommend designating one clear communicator and using precise language. Phrases like “critically ill” or “life support being withdrawn” carry uncertainty that prepares loved ones emotionally. Honest conversations after the fact, including sincere apologies without defensiveness, are often the only path toward healing fractured trust.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Many users supported the poster, focusing on the shock and emotional harm caused

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Particular-Try5584 − NTA. This was not your SIL’s news to share, and she didn’t even relay it properly. She should have simply said

“Your mum is in the hospital, and in ICU, please come” **IF** your brother didn’t want to talk to you to explain more. “I’m sorry, I don’t know much more,...

Now she thinks she can hug you and everything will be better. Multi generational family feuds have been started for less.

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She should apologise “I”m sorry, I screwed up. I wasn’t thinking straight. Please forgive me when you are able” is what you deserve to hear.

Always_travelin − NTA. I'm leaning towards N A H depending on the SIL's history, but her wording of this situation was a__orrent to say the least when dealing with a...

All she had to say was "they've taken her off life support" or "I'm not sure if she's still alive" and it would be better than expressing her certainty that...

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[Reddit User] − NTA and s__ew your SIL

KINGCOCO − YTA. Your sister clearly thought pulling life support meant she would die shortly thereafter. I think most people are of the same belief. She acted honestly and good...

People saying it wasn't her news to share - she and everyone else was pushing OP to call her brother's WHO WERE NOT ANSWERING THEIR PHONES.

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It's ridiculous to expect SIL to say "ya something horrible happened. I can't tell you. Keep calling your brothers or go to the hospital. " Had she done that OP...

Or had her mother been dead OP would be mad at SIL for lying to her. OP feels like one of those people you can't win with. You owe her...

[Reddit User] − INFO: Is it possible your SIL misunderstood the situation?

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Others took a more balanced view, pointing to grief and misunderstanding

Every_Carpet904 − I understand that this would have been a traumatic experience, but I think she thought your mom was going to die right away when the life support was...

SubarcticFarmer − I'm going with NAH, SIL sounds like she genuinely cares about you and didn't think she was misinforming you. You also went through a lot yourself.

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OkBoss3435 − NAH For the reasons others have outlined: high emotional times, unlikely malice intended, grief and loss etc. But your workplace needs an “in case of emergencies” number to...

Family had tried to contact you 13 times and hadn’t been able to get hold of you (reasonably given the work you do) but you had to call SIL after...

and not being able to get hold of them. It doesn’t sound like SIL made all those calls (apologies if I’m wrong) or was intended to be the communicator.

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She was the first person you could get hold of. Doesn’t make the poor communication ok, or your anger less valid. But (and no one will ever know now)

if there had been a way to reach you via a work number a) you could have been notified sooner and b) may have gotten clearer info directly.

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ScaryButterscotch474 − NAH Maybe I am ignorant but that doesn’t seem to me like your SIL lied? Maybe she meant it differently to how you took it…

FraughtOverwrought − I’m going with NAH in the absence of more information about your SIL (although I see from comments she’s a bit unhinged - it’s just that I wonder...

It’s absolutely reasonable to be angry though and she should definitely apologise; but she probably wasn’t being malicious,

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I don’t know if that helps? Maybe not. I’m sorry anyway, terrible scenario. It would take me a while to get past being angry.

A few comments leaned into dark humor or blunt realism

excel_pager_420 − I'm sorry for your loss. "Tell OP Mums been taken off life support". Not gonna lie, in an emotional situation, when that's all the information you've been given,

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I can completely understand why you understand that to mean she had already passed, or would pass as soon as life support was turned off.

You say your Mum passed a day after being taken off life support. My friends Grandma had a similar situation, they made the decision to switch off life support,

so everyone expected her to die pretty soon after that. And her Grandma hung around for another week before passing.

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Do you really believe your sister-in-law deliberately told you your Mum had passed because she expected your Mum to be alive when you arrived?

Medical staff can't accurately predict how long patients will stick around after life support is turned off, but your SIL can?

And to be honest, it sounds like your SIL was the only reason you were informed of the situation and arrived in time to get that extra day to say...

Your brothers weren't being very communicative to her or to you. Is it possible you're angry at your Mum for not informing you of this routine operation and misdirecting that...

[Reddit User] − YTA she was the one to break the news because she was the one you could get ahold of. She told you your mother died because that...

With the emotions and panic going on she may have understood it to mean that in the time she was told that they were removing your mother from life support...

[Reddit User] − INFO: Did she intentionally lie or did she just misunderstand what had happened?

survival-nut − Info - was she passing on info from your brother? If brother said, they just took her off life support, that could mean different things to different people.

It is difficult to make a judgement when we don't know exactly who said what, family dynamics, intent etc.

Nester1953 − I agree with everyone who's saying that there needs to be a conversation. I am envisioning a situation in which your SIL believed your mother to be dead...

I imagine your brother coming away from a conversation with the doctor crying and telling his wife that they'd removed life support.

Your SIL could have interpreted this to mean that your mom was dead or would be dead in seconds, as on TV when the doctors "pull the plug" and moments...

Of course, at the point when she realized that she had conveyed misinformation, SIL should have corrected it, but I imagine a very stressful

tragic scene at the hospital with everyone o__rwhelmed with grief, and her message to you the last thing on her mind. (Not excusing her, but this could explain the omission...

If your SIL is in general a good person, it would be great if you had it in you to talk to her about the impact of her message, give...

and, if you can find it within yourself, forgive her at this very difficult time when the whole family could use each other's support.

This story sits at the messy intersection of grief, miscommunication, and human error. The poster lost their mother while carrying the added burden of emotional whiplash, believing she was already gone when she was not. At the same time, the sister-in-law may have acted out of panic rather than malice. Whether forgiveness is possible often depends on accountability, timing, and empathy from both sides. In moments like these, words matter more than people realize. What would you do if you were in their place?

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