AITA for refusing to claim my grandma?
A young adult has maintained low-to-no contact with a grandmother whose affection appears conditional—warm toward young children but turning cold, critical, and punitive once they reach adolescence. The grandmother has a long pattern of petty cruelty, verbal abuse, dramatic exits, and blame-shifting, including screaming at the poster as a child, making their little brother cry on his birthday, and storming out of Christmas after an argument with the father, leaving a manipulative note and demanding the removal of a deceased uncle’s ashes from the family mantel.
The poster now refuses to “claim” (acknowledge or pursue a relationship with) this grandmother. When relatives urge reconciliation or call the poster overreacting, the poster stands firm. Friends are shocked by the poster’s private wish that she were dead, seeing it as simpler than the ongoing toxicity.

‘AITA for refusing to claim my grandma?’
Grandma’s affection vanished around age 13 and never truly returned.



The cruelty extended to the younger brother and culminated in a dramatic Christmas exit.






Grandma demanded apologies and punished the family with withdrawal.






The grandmother’s pattern—adoring pre-teens, then turning critical and punitive once independence emerges—suggests a deep discomfort with children becoming autonomous individuals. The poster’s refusal to “claim” (re-engage or pursue) her is a healthy boundary after years of verbal abuse, public humiliation, scapegoating, and emotional blackmail (the Christmas walk-out, note blaming the father, demanding ashes be removed). Walking away from conversations about her “innocence” protects the poster’s peace and prevents enabling manipulative narratives.
Opposing views might argue the language (“easier if she was dead”) is too harsh or that family ties deserve effort regardless of behavior. However, the poster isn’t wishing harm—they’re expressing exhaustion with a reality where death would be simpler to explain than ongoing toxicity. The grandmother’s refusal to apologize, reflect, or change, combined with targeting the younger brother, justifies full disengagement.
Broader perspective: unconditional love is not owed to someone who inflicts consistent harm. Cutting contact with a toxic grandparent—or refusing to pretend the relationship is salvageable—is often the kindest choice for oneself and younger family members. The poster’s stance protects their own mental health and models healthy boundaries for the next generation.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Most readers strongly support the poster, viewing the grandmother as toxic and the refusal to engage as necessary self-protection.




![[Reddit User] − NTA You're grandma forces you guys to earn her love? Hell no. Respect I can get. Earn respect. You don't earn love from family. Either they love...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768555360406-5.webp)



Several commenters highlight narcissistic traits and the need to break the cycle.









A few comments question the post’s fit for AITA while still siding with the poster.



This grandmother’s pattern of conditional love, verbal abuse, dramatic exits, and blame-shifting has poisoned family holidays for years. The poster’s refusal to “claim” her—meaning re-engage, pretend the relationship is salvageable, or tolerate further manipulation—is widely seen as healthy self-protection, not assholery. The real harm lies in the grandmother’s behavior and the relatives who minimize it.
Have you ever had to distance yourself from a family member who was toxic but still expected access? How do you explain such decisions to relatives who push for “family unity”? At what point does protecting your peace (and younger siblings’ well-being) outweigh attempts at reconciliation?
