AITAH for refusing to let my brother announce his engagement at my graduation party?
A 25-year-old woman recently graduated from medical school after years of grueling work and sacrifice. Her parents threw a big celebration party at their house to honor the milestone — a day she had dreamed of for a long time.
During the party, her older brother pulled her aside and asked if he could use the gathering to announce his engagement to his girlfriend in front of the whole family. She said no, wanting the focus to remain on her achievement. He stormed out, accused her of jealousy and stealing his thunder, and now some family members think she’s being selfish. Is she the asshole for refusing to share her spotlight?

‘AITAH for refusing to let my brother announce his engagement at my graduation party?’
The party was meant to celebrate years of intense effort:

The brother approached privately with his request:


She emphasized the importance of the moment:


The reaction was immediate and intense:


She tries to see his side:


Milestone events like graduations are deeply personal achievements — especially medical school, which involves years of sacrifice, stress, and emotional breakdowns. The graduate deserves the spotlight for one day without competing announcements.
Asking to announce an engagement at someone else’s celebration is a common etiquette breach. It shifts focus and often turns the event into a dual celebration, which can feel like hijacking. Etiquette experts (including Emily Post’s modern guidelines) consistently advise against using another person’s event to make personal announcements unless explicitly invited to do so by the host.
The brother’s reaction — storming out and accusing jealousy — is classic deflection. He knew the party was for his sister yet still asked, then punished her for saying no. This suggests entitlement rather than innocent excitement. The sister’s response (holding firm) is healthy boundary-setting, not bitterness.
Psychologist Dr. Ramani Durvasula notes that family members sometimes compete for attention during big life moments, especially when one person’s achievement highlights another’s perceived stagnation. The brother may have felt overshadowed and tried to reclaim the narrative. The graduate is not obligated to share her moment to soothe his feelings.
See what others had to share with OP:
The Reddit community overwhelmingly supported the OP — NTA — and saw the brother’s request as selfish spotlight-stealing.
Most called it tacky and unfair to hijack a graduation party:




Many pointed out the irony and hypocrisy:
![[Reddit User] − NTA. It's your graduation party, it's a day to celebrate you. As soon as he made his announcement, it would no longer be your graduation party,](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/wp-editor-1770025489268-1.webp)



A few highlighted the emotional weight of medical school:

His request (and subsequent tantrum) shows entitlement, not excitement. Accusing you of jealousy at your own celebration is projection at its finest. You can be genuinely happy for his engagement while still protecting your moment. If he wants an engagement announcement with the whole family, he can host his own event. You’re allowed to say no without guilt. What do you think — should she have let it slide to keep peace, or was protecting her spotlight the right call?
