AITA for telling my brother that our mom picked me to make medical choices for her in the event she can’t?

A 33-year-old man has two older brothers: Matt (35) and Frank (38). Their father passed away several years ago, followed soon after by their mother’s diagnosis of early-onset dementia. While she was still competent, she planned for her future care, including designating one son as her legal power of attorney for medical decisions when she could no longer make them herself. Frank lives across the country and was never seriously considered. After separate conversations, she chose the man because he agreed to honor her wish to stay in her own home with in-home aides (funded by life insurance and state help), while Matt argued it would be wasteful and pushed for assisted living.

She asked the man and Frank to keep the decision secret to avoid conflict while she was still somewhat aware. Three years later, as her condition worsens and Matt continues to insist on a care facility, the man revealed he holds the power of attorney. Matt became upset, cried to their mother (who was distressed by the revelation), and now Frank says the secret should have stayed hidden. Is the man the asshole?

‘AITA for telling my brother that our mom picked me to make medical choices for her in the event she can’t?’

The family faced a difficult diagnosis:

I (33M) have 2 older brothers, Matt (35) and Frank (38). Our father passed a few years back and not longer after, our mother was diagnosed with early onset dementia....

She began making plans for what to do when she reached a point where she could no longer do so. That included assigning one of us legally to make choices...

She discussed her wishes privately:

Frank lives across the country so my mom never really considered him. She then spoke to me and Matt separately. Just in abstract, stating her wishes. She had a sizebale...

She does not want to go into a nursing home unless there is no other choice. Her policy will pay for this alongside her bills and she’d also qualify for...

The man agreed; Matt did not:

I agreed with this and told her I would do everything I could to make it possible. Matt, however, told her that he felt an in home aide would be...

Given our jobs and own families, we couldn’t be there long every day and our mom made it clear she doesn’t want us to let this consume our lives.

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Though, I still planned on visiting daily, even if I couldn’t stay long. There were also arguments over Mom not wanting to be kept alive by machines as well as...

She chose the man and asked for secrecy:

Given Matt’s clear intention to ignore our mother’s wishes, she chose me. She did ask me and Frank to keep this quiet.

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I agreed, though I pointed out it could come out at some point. She insisted he not know as she didn’t want to spend the rest of her time with...

The secret emerged under pressure:

Fast forward 3 years and our mother is slowly getting worse. She has a part time aide now but I know it’ll move up to full time soon. Matt is...

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Eventually, I told him that it wasn’t his choice. He said “mom isn’t in a place to decide”. I said “I know, she left me in charge of that.” and...

Then later, went to our mom crying, saying how hurt he was. While my mom isn’t doing well, she still is somewhat aware of what’s going on and is clearly...

Frank says I shouldn’t have said anything. I feel like I had no other choice because Matt would just keep arguing with me. AITA?

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Early-onset dementia creates immense emotional strain on families, and designating a power of attorney (POA) is one of the most important legal steps a person can take while still competent. The mother’s choice to select the son who aligned with her wishes (in-home care, no machines, organ donation) over the one who openly disagreed was rational and protective. Keeping it secret was intended to preserve peace during her remaining lucid time, but secrecy in end-of-life planning often backfires when decisions must be enforced.

The man’s revelation was inevitable — once Matt pushed for assisted living, the POA had to be invoked to stop him. Pretending consensus was possible would have been dishonest and delayed necessary care. Matt’s reaction (crying to their mother) was manipulative, whether intentional or not, as it distressed a cognitively impaired person who could no longer fully defend her choices.

Elder law and dementia care experts recommend transparency when possible, but also protecting the patient from undue influence. The man could have consulted an elder law attorney earlier to explore protective measures (e.g., limiting Matt’s access if visits consistently upset her). Frank’s criticism ignores the practical reality: the secret could not hold once conflict arose. The man is not the asshole — he honored his mother’s wishes under pressure. The primary fault lies with Matt for disregarding her stated desires and with the mother for delaying disclosure.

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These are the responses from Reddit users:

Most users strongly supported the OP (NTA), praising him for protecting his mother’s autonomy and condemning Matt’s behavior as selfish or manipulative:

many_hobbies_gal − NTA, now please stop with the self blame. It was going to come out eventually and your brother is only looking out after his own interests.

I find this disgusting… I commend you for doing all your doing, for putting Mom's best interests first. That isn't always easy to do and your brother is just being...

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SushiGuacDNA − NTA. You can't keep your power secret once it becomes time to use it. The a__hole move would have been to not say anything…

Mom chose you because your views aligned more closely with her own, but that doesn't make Matt a bad kid or anything. I can understand why he's hurt.

ArseBlarster420 − NTA. My Mom made me the POA to make those decisions instead of my older sister… Your mom picked you for a reason, don’t let her down.

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owls_and_cardinals − NTA. This is an impossibly hard situation… More than anything, Matt is a (massive) AH here… It is also s__tty of him to go complain to her now,...

KronkLaSworda − NTA Since you have power of attorney, I'd limit Matt's visits to mom unless you are present. Don't let him trick the dementia patient into signing power of...

Petefriend86 − NTA. I might go so far as to ban your brother's visits if he insists on upsetting a dementia patient.

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Clean-Fisherman-4601 − My mother had Alzheimer's and my older sister was POA… Right now your mother is doing well. I think Matt is just being greedy. Contact a lawyer to...

A smaller group offered mild criticism or nuance, often pointing to the mother’s role in delaying the disclosure:

Forward_Squirrel8879 − NTA - But your mom didn't do herself or you any favors by avoiding this conversation with Matt… I suggest that you sit down with your mother's estate...

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jrm1102 − NTA - I hate to say this to you, but ya know who the AH is… your mom. Its her choice for whoever she wants to have listed...

Several comments shared deep personal experience with dementia and caregiving, emphasizing the unpredictable nature of the disease and the importance of boundaries:

gnomelet − As someone who worked as an in home aide and then later an assisted living, then a full time nursing home, NTA, however please do not feel guilty...

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Please please please do not feel bad if your mothers dementia progresses that way, it is an absolutely horrible disease that can be incredibly unpredictable in so many ways.

Beautiful-Peak399 − NTA. Matt just wants to get his hands on Mom's money. He doesn't want to spend it on home help because he'll end up with less of it....

The man is not the asshole. His mother deliberately chose him as her medical power of attorney because he agreed to respect her wishes — staying at home with aides, avoiding prolonged machine support, and donating organs — while Matt openly intended to disregard them. Keeping the decision secret was her attempt to preserve peace during her remaining lucid time, but once Matt actively pushed for assisted living, disclosure became unavoidable to protect her autonomy.

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Matt’s reaction — crying to their cognitively impaired mother — added unnecessary distress and can be seen as emotionally manipulative. Frank’s criticism overlooks the practical necessity: the secret could not hold once real decisions were required. The man honored his mother’s clearly stated desires under pressure. That is not wrong; it is loyal and responsible.

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