AITA for telling my future SIL I won’t be an uncle to their child?

A 22-year-old man, adopted by his aunt and uncle at age 6 after his biological mother’s struggles, recently faced an awkward family moment when his estranged adoptive brother’s fiancée excitedly told him he would soon be an uncle. He responded bluntly that he would not be an uncle, repeating the very words his brother had used throughout childhood to insist they weren’t real siblings. The comment shocked the fiancée, who appeared unaware of their painful history of bullying and rejection.

What makes this situation more complicated is the brother’s recent attempt to apologize after learning he was becoming a father, which the younger man politely declined. When the brother later texted to complain that the fiancée should be left out of their issues, the adopted brother stood firm, insisting he simply stated the truth his brother had never shared. This family rift now risks affecting the incoming baby and future gatherings.

‘AITA for telling my future SIL I won’t be an uncle to their child?’

The childhood dynamic was marked by persistent cruelty from the older brother.

I (22M) was legally adopted by my aunt and uncle when I was 6 (my uncle is the brother of my biological mother, who had some d__g problems, was in...

My adopted parents already had a son, my biological cousin (now 25M). When I went to live with them, he was jealous of me, probably used to being an only...

He would say mean things to me when our parents weren’t around, like my “real parents” didn’t want me. He also always said I wasn’t really his brother, and he...

The bullying got so bad that our parents signed us all up for family therapy, hoping it would help. It didn’t; it got worse when we got to high school.

A recent outreach from the brother reopened old wounds without changing the past.

We pretty much lost contact when he left for college, but see each other occasionally in family events, anniversaries, Christmas and so on.

Well, a few months ago he reached out to me. He said he wanted to tell me that his girlfriend (now fiancée) was pregnant and that the prospect of being...

and how he treated me; he wanted to apologize; I said I was not interested in building a relationship given our history but wished him the best.

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The confrontation happened unexpectedly at a family birthday gathering.

Last week I saw him and his fiancée at our parents’ house for our mom’s birthday. She met me in the kitchen and said something like: so you’ll soon be...

I told her I would not be an uncle, because as her partner always said, I’m not really his brother. She seemed really shocked; I got the feeling he never...

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I think I could have been nicer since she’s not to blame and I admit seeing him is still triggers bad memories to me. My cousin/brother texted me the next...

and that I’m within my right not to forgive him but he’s hoping I leave her out of this. I told him I was not rude to her, just told...

The heart of the matter is whether the adopted brother owed politeness or silence to his future sister-in-law when she assumed a close uncle role. He chose honesty over pretense, echoing the exact exclusionary language used against him for years. While his delivery may have felt abrupt, the underlying truth—that their relationship never became brotherly—was never hidden from anyone until the fiancée entered the picture. The brother’s failure to disclose this history left her blindsided and set up unrealistic expectations for future family interactions.

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Opposing views suggest softening the response for the fiancée’s sake, since she bears no responsibility for past actions. A gentler explanation could have preserved civility at family events without compromising boundaries. However, forcing someone to play “uncle” after years of rejection risks reopening wounds and rewarding unaddressed harm.

From a broader perspective, this reflects how childhood bullying within families can create lasting divisions that don’t vanish with an apology or a new baby. True reconciliation requires accountability and time, not obligatory role-playing. The adopted brother protected his emotional space while exposing a relevant family dynamic, even if the moment was uncomfortable. His stance prioritizes self-preservation over forced harmony.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

The overwhelming majority of commenters supported the adopted brother, validating his boundaries and criticizing the older brother for hiding their history.

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Gypsyheartwanderer − NTA People (who are meant to be your family), don’t get to be s__tty to you all your childhood, and then turn around as an adult and say...

and expect you to be ok with it. You’re entitled to your feelings, and nothing is going to change any of your trauma overnight.

[Reddit User] − NTA. You just informed her about the strained relationship between you and your cousin, which isn't rude statement to make at all.

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It is your cousin/brother's responsibility to own up to the bullying and explain to his fiancee why you do not consider him a true brother.

old_vegetables − A bully’s apology means nothing if they’re not willing to own up to their past in front of those who don’t know.

If he truly regretted his actions, he’d own up to the consequences — namely that a lot of people don’t want to associate with bullies

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MaxTheCookie − NTA. You told cousin that you do not want to build an relationship with him due to your past,

you just told the truth to SIL so that she would not have expectations on you or start to complain that you never do uncle stuff when the baby is...

wewillfuckyouup − nta you can forgive but never forget you were bullied and he made you a outcast you have the right to pick who your family is you told...

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Point_Aggravating − NTA Your feelings are valid and he should not have dismissed them like he did. His apology is a good thing but it’ll take more that a simple...

I would not be totally closed to initiating a healthier relationship with him if I were you though, but it has to be on your own terms. PTSD can be...

A few responses acknowledged the pain while gently suggesting ways to handle future interactions more smoothly.

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Fortressa- − NTA. But you should try to take the high road here - you could maybe reach out to the fiancée and apologise for being harsh to her, that...

that you were not aware that your ‘brother’ had not been truthful about the history and his role in it, and that this is a complex and painful situation, you...

but you wish her the best for her pregnancy. Because that makes you look like the classy, reasonable one, and puts everything back on him to explain and fix.

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(You are going to bump into them again at family functions, you want to seem like a good person, not a source of friction, even as you keep them at...

FunkyTuba − NTA She deserves to fully understand the family dynamics she’s about to sign up for. It’s admirable that your brother has had a change of heart,

but a letting a buried secret like that stay buried is the stuff of cathartic fiction you don’t want to continue be a character in.

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One comment kept it short and direct, focusing on the older brother’s lack of honesty.

Logical-Cost4571 − NTA he’s a c__ard for not telling her

Danube_Kitty − NTA. She has approached you first. You haven't been rude just set the boundary. If your cousin haven't told her about history between you two that is his...

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This family story reveals how deeply childhood rejection can shape adult relationships, especially when one person expects automatic closeness while the other has spent years protecting themselves from hurt. Most people agreed the adopted brother had every right to set a clear boundary and speak truthfully, even if the timing caught the fiancée off guard. The real issue appears to lie with the older brother’s selective storytelling rather than the response itself.

Do you believe people can ever fully move past sibling bullying, or are some wounds too deep for forced family roles like “uncle”? Would you have handled the kitchen conversation differently to soften the blow for the fiancée? How much responsibility does the older brother bear for not preparing her? Share your thoughts in the comments!

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