AITA for rejecting my brother’s apology dinner?

Turning 17 was supposed to feel special, but for this teen, it felt painfully familiar. Once again, his brother didn’t show up. While the excuse this time was a migraine, it echoed a long list of reasons that had kept his brother away from nearly every important milestone in his life.

What followed wasn’t a shouting match or a dramatic confrontation, but something quieter—and heavier. When his brother later offered an apology dinner, the teen declined. He wasn’t angry, he said. He was just tired. But that simple “no” set off a wave of reactions from his family, who accused him of being petty and cruel. Confused and second-guessing himself, he turned to social media to ask whether refusing the dinner really made him the problem.

‘AITA for rejecting my brother’s apology dinner?’

It all started with what should have been a straightforward birthday celebration, but quickly turned into a familiar disappointment:

I (17M) literally just turned 17 March 1st. I had my birthday dinner that Saturday which was the 2nd.

I was expecting my whole family to come but instead my brother (25M) called to cancel to let me know that he couldn't come because his wife (25F) had a...

He then laid out a pattern that had followed him for years:

This happens often whenever I had something special to me.. I will give examples: My eight grade graduation

- My brother had to miss it due to her being to tired from work. My ninth grade award ceremony

- My brother had to miss because she was sick with the flu or something.

My 15th birthday party

- I really do not remember the excuse. 10th grade award ceremony

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- My brother had to miss it because they had a wedding to go too :/. My 16th birthday party- My brother had to miss it because her sister was...

- My brother had to miss it because she had a Mirgane

I can't really fault her for this I guess, those are valid excuses but it just sucks that they all happen around the time of my birthday or like something...

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I don't even mind if she doesn't come, I'd just like if my brother came. I'm just happy that my other family does come and support me which I love.

A few days later, his brother tried to make amends:

Wednesday, my brother came by and gave me some money and a birthday card and apologized for missing my birthday (Again) and asked me if he could take me out...

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I'm not gonna lie if this was a one time occurrence I would've took him out on the offer like I did the first and second time he missed my...

He took it well as I thought but apparently he was hurt by me turning down the offer cause my other brother (21M) and my dad came to me and...

I told them that he didn't seem hurt when I rejected it but they told me that he was and felt really bad about missing my birthday I told them...

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I said that he already got me something and I was happy with it. Cut to today, he called me again and asked me if I was sure if I...

What followed was unexpected pressure from the rest of the family:

My dad told me that he wants me to go out to eat with him tomorrow so he doesn't feel bad. I told him that he does this every year...

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My dad then told me that he feels like I'm doing this to be petty and only trying to make my brother feel more guilty? My family is making me...

ETA: Idk why some words are big as hell

Repeated disappointment within family relationships can quietly erode trust, especially when expectations go unmet year after year. According to family therapist Dr. Lindsay Gibson, patterns matter more than individual incidents. “When someone repeatedly fails to show up for emotionally significant events, the hurt accumulates,” she explains. “Over time, people stop reacting with anger and start responding with emotional withdrawal instead.”

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In this case, OP’s refusal to attend an apology dinner isn’t rooted in spite, but in emotional fatigue. His response reflects a coping mechanism known as disengagement, where individuals lower expectations to protect themselves from repeated hurt. While families often interpret this behavior as cold or punitive, it is frequently a sign of someone trying to regain emotional stability.

There’s also a notable shift in responsibility. The brother’s offer to take OP out appears less focused on repairing trust and more on alleviating his own discomfort. Psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner has written extensively about this dynamic, noting that guilt-driven apologies can unintentionally pressure the injured party into emotional labor they’re not ready for. “True repair,” she writes, “comes from changed behavior, not gestures that ask for immediate forgiveness.”

The family’s reaction further complicates the situation. By urging OP to attend the dinner “so his brother doesn’t feel bad,” they reposition the emotional burden onto the younger sibling. This can invalidate OP’s lived experience, making him feel responsible for managing adult emotions while his own feelings are minimized.

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Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Most commenters sided with OP, agreeing that years of missed milestones had understandably worn him down, and that declining the apology dinner didn’t make him petty:

lmmontes - NTA. This whole pattern feels suspicious. A lot of those excuses didn’t actually stop your brother from attending alone.

It honestly sounds like his wife doesn’t want him there. At this point, it’s reasonable to question whether there’s even a backup plan when she suddenly can’t go again.

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lihzee - NTA. You said no, and that should be the end of it. Your family is pressuring you to go just so your brother doesn’t feel bad, which turns...

Others encouraged OP to be more direct, believing honesty could prevent long-term resentment:

zippy_zaboo - NTA, but you should consider telling him the truth. This isn’t about one dinner. It’s about a repeated pattern that hurts. If you explain that clearly, he might...

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Tomboy-T - NTA. Once is understandable. Twice is bad luck. Three times is a pattern. After years of this, of course you’re emotionally checked out. Anyone would be.

Apart-Ad-6518 - NTA. If his wife had a migraine, why couldn’t he still come? There’s nothing he could’ve done for her by staying home. You’re not being petty, and you’re...

Some commenters believed the root of the problem went deeper than the birthday itself:

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Sea-Tea-4130 - NTA. It sounds like your brother has consistently prioritized his wife over you, and that hurts. He needs to address that instead of offering apology dinners after the...

Not everyone fully agreed, though a few offered a softer perspective:

lightninghazard - NAH. I get why you’re tired of the pattern, but I also think it’s nice that your brother keeps trying to make it up to you. You’re not...

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A handful of commenters urged OP to reset expectations:

CancelAshamed1310 - NAH. You’re 17, and these things feel huge right now. Long-term, only your parents are guaranteed to be at every milestone. That doesn’t mean your feelings aren’t valid,...

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This situation isn’t really about a dinner—it’s about what happens when missed moments pile up over time. OP didn’t lash out, demand apologies, or cut ties. He simply declined an invitation that felt too little, too late. For him, emotional distance had already settled in.

Families often struggle when long-standing patterns are finally acknowledged, especially when silence turns into a boundary. Was OP being petty, or was he protecting himself from another round of disappointment? And when apologies come without lasting change, is it fair to expect immediate forgiveness?

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