AITA for refusing to take in my 7 year old half sister for a month while my estranged father undergoes a heart surgery?

A 28-year-old woman thought she had left her complicated family history firmly in the past. She had built a demanding career, created a stable home with her partner, and devoted herself to raising a child she considers her own. Then one emotional phone call changed everything, reopening old wounds she believed were long healed.

Her estranged father, absent for a decade, was suddenly facing a serious heart surgery. With his wife gone and no clear caregiver available, the family turned to her with a request that felt impossible. What followed was a clash between responsibility, emotional boundaries, and the reality of her everyday life. When the story hit social media, reactions poured in fast, revealing just how divided people can be when blood ties collide with hard limits.

AITA for refusing to take in my 7 year old half sister for a month while my estranged father undergoes a heart surgery?

Everything shifted when a late-night call delivered news she never expected to hear

I'm 28 year old woman and I DO NOT have a relationship with my father. He left our family for a younger woman when I was 18. I haven't had...

He tried to accuse my heartbroken mother of parental alienation, but I quickly shut that down. As a lawyer, I lead a hectic life. I live with my partner of...

She left my SO and their baby for her sugar daddy and I've been raising my step daughter as my own since she was 1. I hope to adopt her...

The situation escalated when the family explained why they needed her help specifically

Well last night, I received a call from my grandmother crying over the phone telling me that my father suffered a massive heart attack and that he's currently in the...

I was informed that he will be undergoing a complicated heart surgery which will render him unable to take care of his daughter for a while. His wife passed away...

Practical realities quickly clashed with emotional expectations from her relatives

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My grandmother is on a wheelchair so it's not possible to take care of her. She said that my father wants me to look after the girl. I told her...

I have a very busy life, we get home really late. It would be impossible for us to take care of another child. SO's parents live 5 mins away from...

The conversation turned painful when her father directly confronted her decision

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Later, she handed over the call to my father who sounded really feeble and weak. He said that his daughter needs her family and that I should "step up" for...

He said that I was already doing so much for a girl who "isn't really my blood". He was perplexed about the fact that I take care of my stepdaughter...

She explained why the arrangement would not work, even temporarily

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I said that she could stay over with his close friend Brad's family. He is retired and lives with his wife. They have plenty of time to take care of...

We don't have a spare room. I've never met her. My stepdaughter is on the spectrum and doesn't deal well with new people around her. I can't subject her to...

My father then tried to guilt trip me into visiting him in the hospital. I honestly don't have the time to do that either.

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AITA for refusing to take in the girl for a month when she could just live with other people who actually know her and have the time ?

At the heart of this conflict is a collision between emotional expectation and practical capacity. The woman has built a life centered around stability for her stepdaughter, who relies on routine and familiarity. From her perspective, introducing a new child into the household, even temporarily, could disrupt that balance in ways she cannot manage responsibly.

From the father’s viewpoint, fear and vulnerability are likely driving his reaction. Facing major surgery while worrying about his young daughter’s care can intensify regret and prompt last-minute appeals to family bonds. That does not erase the past, but it explains why emotions are running high on his end.

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According to Dr. John Gottman of The Gottman Institute, “Healthy families are built on trust and reliability, not guilt or obligation imposed during moments of crisis.” His research emphasizes that caregiving decisions work best when they align with realistic capacity, not pressure fueled by fear or unresolved history.

In situations like this, experts often suggest exploring solutions that minimize disruption for all children involved. Clear communication, temporary guardianship with familiar adults, and professional support services can reduce harm. While empathy for the younger child is natural, prioritizing a stable environment is not selfish. It reflects an understanding that care requires more than good intentions; it demands time, space, and emotional availability.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Many users supported her decision, emphasizing responsibility to the child already in her care…

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[Reddit User] − NTA. He left the family when it suited him and now he wants to be back in your life. ..when it suits him? That's a big nope...

Even if you didn't have your own daughter to raise, you wouldn't be TA. But you do have your own child to raise, and you need to do what is...

Darth_Mufasa − NTA. Your dad hasn't been part of your family for 10 years. Him and his daughter are strangers. This isnt your concern any more than some random person...

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sputpup − NTA. Your stepdaughter is the first priority, especially since she is on the spectrum and 100% will not like the change,

and since she is 5 she wont understand why your sister came into her life for such a short time and left (if it really would he for a month,...

They can find someone else to take care of her, especially since you dont want to, and if they forced you, there would always be the possibility of resentment forming...

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I would not take her in, just because this is a vital time in both kids lives to be learning and growing. They need love which your stepdaughter has in...

murderousbudgie − NTA. You're doing what's best for *your* daughter. (and she is your daughter, you're the one raising her). I feel for this little girl who lost her mom...

TLema − NTA, and honestly, you make a fair point about not subjecting her to strangers.

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Others shared mixed feelings, balancing empathy for the child with realism

thin_white_dutchess − Eh, you’re NTA, but I feel for the kid. She’s not her dad.

pattisabs − ESH. You have no obligation to do so, but I just can’t imagine not helping a small child who has lost her mother and might lose her father....

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I don’t think you’re wrong for being busy and not having the resources but personally I would feel like a s__tty person not stepping up to help my half sister...

nickis84 − NTA - Always amazes me that these guys leave their families for a younger woman and start new families. They never make plans for the younger wife dying...

So here's this older man who has abandoned his older child and expects her to pick up the pieces of his life. If he really wanted the sisters to have...

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But he went through grandma and because he basically needs childcare for a month. Here's a reality check what if he doesn't make it through the surgery?

Where does the girl go then? These are conversations dad should be having with someone who is more involved with this child.

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FisherManAz − NTA. Keep doing what is best for your family. It’s better for you to not take the girl when you know you can’t properly care for her with...

OverallDisaster − NTA. I never get the "YTAs" on posts like this. Usually the premise is that you are obligated to do things like this because you're blood related.

That literally doesn't matter. You aren't obligated to do anything for someone you don't even know just because you share DNA.

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A few responses added blunt or lighter takes to cut through the tension

castlerigger − Nope, NTA. I’m expecting the call from someone in my family one day that I need to do something / go and see my birth father when he’s...

despite him leaving our whole family over 30 years ago, and there won’t be a moment of hesitation to say nope, not interested,

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I won’t be there when he’s sick, I don’t need to make peace before he dies, and I won’t be at the funeral or thinking about him in any way.

S__tty parenting doesn’t come with a ‘just kidding’ or ‘i didn’t really mean it’ or ‘yea I was terrible but c’mon, family eh? !’ caveat, so it is absolutely your...

and you don’t owe him any of it. And, by the way, congrats on escaping family shitehousery into a great career and building your own special family!

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Redqueenhypo − NTA. You basically have a daughter, one who might have a super difficult time adjusting to a complete stranger living in her house for a month

and getting attention from her parents. The kid’s mother can take her, or Sir Wanted-an-Upgrade can ask his friend to take care of her.

rbf_queen − NTA and don’t let anyone tell you that you’re in the wrong here. Jesus. Take care of yourself and your own family first. Always.

overpregnant − NTA. Baby Boom Is a movie, not a template

ScoobyFan70 − NTA you said it best you don't have the time nor the space and you've never met her. Just because she is related to you does not mean...

This situation highlights how messy family obligations can become when old wounds resurface during a crisis. One side sees blood ties and urgency, while the other sees daily realities and the needs of a child already depending on them. There is no easy answer, only competing priorities shaped by past choices and present limits. Should family responsibility outweigh personal capacity, or does caring mean knowing when to say no? What would you do in her place?

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