AITA for trying to even out the presents me and my brother would get as kids?

A young man tried to make up for his parents’ unfair treatment by sharing gifts with his older brother throughout childhood — but those well-meaning gestures ended up hurting his brother deeply. While he enjoyed lavish birthday parties and piles of presents, his brother often received just a simple cake and a few small items like socks or a video game, highlighting the painful favoritism.

He thought he was showing love and fairness by buying extras and giving away his own gifts. But after his brother’s recent painful breakup, everything boiled over: the older brother screamed that he never wanted pity, that those childhood acts only made him feel worse, and slammed the door — leaving his sibling stunned and heartbroken.

‘AITA for trying to even out the presents me and my brother would get as kids?’

It all started with the way their parents treated the two brothers very differently from a young age:

I (22m) have been spoiled by my parents from a young age. I believe it was for a few reasons, I would say I’m “physically” gifted and a was always...

My brother (24m) wasn’t abused physically or anything like that by my parents but he did not get the same treatment I did when we were younger. He’s more artsy,...

So from a young age my parents always were kind of short with my brother and say things to him like “you know how much we have to deal with...

and would thank God for me being what they said was “normal” or that they sent me to them after all the “suffering” they had to deal with with my...

The younger brother felt uncomfortable with the unfairness, even though as a kid he didn’t know how to stand up for his sibling:

As a kid I never really knew how to stick up for him but I didn’t like the way they treated him. On birthdays and Christmas we’d get different treatments,

his would have little effort from my parents with maybe just a cake and a couple small presents like socks and underwear or a video game.

My birthdays would always be some extravagant balloon infested thing with people over and barbecues and quite a few presents. Similar things on Christmas with the gift disparity.

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My parents would also say things to me as I got older like “you can repay us when you buy us a house after you sign a big league contract”...

So I always felt bad and would try to make up for the birthdays and christmases for him and I’d buy him big presents or when I was younger give...

Recently, when his brother went through a harsh breakup, he wanted to comfort him:

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The other day my brother broke up with his long term GF and it was pretty harsh (she cheated). I tried to pop over at his house to take him...

but when he opened the door he started screaming at me about how he doesn’t need my pity and I’ve always looked down at him by giving him my presents...

and it always made him feel even worse as a kid and he didn’t want my pity then and doesn’t want it now, and to leave him alone and slammed...

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TL;DR me and my brother were treated differently as kids and I would try to even it out by buying him presents or giving him some of the ones I...

This story perfectly illustrates the classic “golden child” vs. “scapegoat” dynamic in families with severe parental favoritism. The younger brother was showered with praise and gifts because of his athletic talent, while the older brother was constantly criticized and made to feel like a burden due to his mental health struggles and learning differences. Parents openly compared them, thanked God for having a “normal” child, and even told the younger one he could “repay” them by buying them a house once he went pro.

The conflict here is heartbreakingly common: the younger brother genuinely believed he was showing love and fairness by sharing gifts and buying extras. But to the older brother, those gestures felt like constant reminders of his “lesser” status — unintentional pity that deepened his sense of inadequacy.

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According to family therapist Rebecca C. Mandeville, author of Rejected, Shamed, and Blamed and an expert on Family Scapegoating Abuse (FSA): “In a narcissistic family system, the scapegoating is driven by a narcissistic family power-holder… the entire cast — the enablers, the bystanders, and the ‘Golden Child’ — who all participate in the shunning to maintain their own safety.” (Source: scapegoatrecovery.com)

The golden child often carries guilt and pressure to “make up” for the favoritism, while the scapegoat carries long-term wounds to their self-worth.

Healing will require an honest, calm conversation. The younger brother should apologize for unintentionally hurting his sibling, clearly explain that his actions came from love, guilt over the unfairness, and admiration — not pity. The older brother may need time (and possibly therapy) to process decades of pain. Together, they can acknowledge the real source of the hurt — their parents — and rebuild their relationship on equal footing. In some cases, limiting contact with parents who continue the favoritism may also be necessary.

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Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

People on social media overwhelmingly sided with both brothers — but placed the real blame squarely on the parents.

Most readers felt deep sympathy for the OP and believed his brother was simply lashing out during an emotional low point — but his actions came from genuine love:

phalanxclone − NAH, your brother reacted badly in an emotional moment and unloaded years of pent up feelings ( no matter how misdirected)

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but you may have missed previous clues to him being unhappy which is why this came as a shock( IMO) I think you both need a heartfelt talk after a...

[Reddit User] − NAH except your parents. You tried to be a good brother but he might have perceived it differently and took it as pity. I'm sure he'll come...

pnutbuttercups56 − NAH except your parents. You were trying in the way you thought best to help your brother. Your brother was emotionally abused by your parents and clearly did...

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Who knows, maybe your parents told him that you pity him. When he calms down try and talk to him. Apologize and let him him know that you weren't trying...

singing_stream − NAH except for your parents. If i were you, i'd send him a message saying something like; ''I'm so sorry i upset you the other day.

I hope we can fix things between us because i love you and never gave you things out of pity. I gave you things because i love you and wanted...

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because it made me feel bad when i was treated so nicely compared to you. I wasn't a better son than you and hated being treated as though i was....

it never made any sense to me why they'd treat us so differently when you're literally the best big brother i could have asked for. I'm not good at explaining...

so i'm sorry that it came across as me pitying you - in honesty i pity our parents for being so blind to the fact that you're a great son...

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but send him something similar to show him how much he means to you and that it wasn't pity, but a sense of injustice and empathy. That you wanted him...

Kewege − NTA- He’s upset about his girlfriend and taking it out on you. It sounds like your parents were really s__tty. I can’t imagine how he feels. Just give...

Many pointed out the classic “golden child vs scapegoat” pattern and suggested writing a heartfelt letter:

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NoteBookBW − NTA. What your parents did to your brother was abuse. Blaming him for thing that he can't control. You and your brother need to sit-down

and have a serious talk about the years of abuse he suffered at the hand of your parents. If you love your brother, you will sit with him and talk...

DannyIsADuck − NTA, obviously. You're parents are the assholes. He may not have been abused phsysically but this is definetly n__lect. Your brother probably appreciates what you do but it...

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Clearly he isn't in a good place right now and judging by how your parents talked about "having so much to deal with for him" he probably has a hard...

PhoenixBird295 − Your parents sound like they're the type of people that only see their kids as property and expect to get everything back (like that house they mentioned,

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like wtf? I don't think you're an a-hole, it seems your intentions were good but weren't received quite well. I would write a letter to your brother and explain everything...

that you want to be there for him and not just throw some pity party. The only a holes in this situation are your parents, they belittled and emotionally messed...

Some comments offered deeper insight into how ADHD and Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) can amplify emotional reactions:

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Marlytess − NTA And don't take it to heart. ADHD gives more then hyperactivity. There are so many other things that come with it. Like imposter syndrom, r__ection sensitivity disorder...

Imposter syndrom means that he will almost always think that a thing that went well was because of luck or someone else. R__ection sensitivity disorder means that he will take...

Especially with his gf cheating on him he will think no one wants him. So pls don't take it to heart. He won't really mean it, but all the negetivity...

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You are a good brother, just let him calm down. And maybe later just take him somewhere else so he can forget it for a moment (and then only have...

This heartbreaking story shows how love can sometimes be misinterpreted when old family wounds run deep. The younger brother acted with the best intentions, but his brother carried years of pain that turned those gestures into something painful. The real source of the hurt? The parents who created and maintained the unfair dynamic.

What do you think? Should the OP keep trying to reach out and explain, or give his brother more space? Have you ever experienced parental favoritism and seen how it affected your relationship with your siblings? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

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