AITA for Not Inviting My Brother to My Wedding After He Made My Childhood a Living Hell?

A 28-year-old bride-to-be is facing intense family backlash after deciding not to invite her older brother to her wedding. Growing up, he was her tormentor — relentless teasing, humiliation, destroying her belongings, and even physical violence, including pushing her down the stairs at age 10, resulting in a broken arm. Their parents dismissed it all as “kids being kids” and never intervened.

Years of therapy helped her rebuild some self-esteem, but the trauma lingers — anxiety, self-doubt, and deep mistrust. Her brother offered one half-hearted apology years ago under parental pressure, but they’ve never truly addressed the damage. Now, the idea of seeing him smile and pose for family photos on her happiest day feels unbearable. Her fiancé fully supports her choice, but her parents are furious, insisting family must come first. Her brother claims she’s being dramatic and depriving him of “his” moment. Is she wrong to protect her peace on her wedding day?

‘AITA for Not Inviting My Brother to My Wedding After He Made My Childhood a Living Hell?’

The bullying started young and only grew worse over time:

Growing up, my brother, Tom, was my worst nightmare. He’s three years older than me, and from as early as I can remember, he made it his mission to torment...

It started with teasing and name-calling, but as we got older, it escalated into full-blown bullying. He would humiliate me in front of our friends, ruin my things, and even...

I remember once he pushed me down the stairs when I was ten, and I broke my arm. Our parents chalked it up to “kids being kids,” but I never...

The impact lasted well into adulthood:

The emotional and physical scars from those years left a deep impact on me. I grew up with zero self-esteem, terrified of making friends or trusting anyone because I always...

I spent years in therapy trying to overcome the trauma, and even now, as an adult, I struggle with anxiety and self-doubt.

Now engaged and planning her wedding, she agonized over the guest list:

Fast forward to today, I’m 28, and I’m getting married to the love of my life. Planning the wedding has been a dream—until it came to the guest list. I...

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but our relationship has never recovered. He apologized once, half-heartedly, after my parents pressured him when I started therapy, but we’ve never really talked about what he did to me....

She ultimately decided against it:

I decided not to invite him. The idea of having him there, smiling and pretending we’re some happy family, made me sick to my stomach. My fiancé supports me 100%,...

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They think I’m being petty and that a wedding is about family, no matter what. My mom even said, “He was just a kid, he didn’t know any better,” which...

The backlash grew louder:

My friends are split—some say I’m right to protect my peace, others think I should invite him for the sake of keeping the family together. Tom found out through the...

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saying I was being dramatic and that I need to let the past go. He even had the nerve to say I’m ruining his chance to be part of my...

Sibling bullying that crosses into physical violence and sustained emotional abuse is far more serious than “kids being kids.” When one child repeatedly harms another — especially with a three-year age gap — and parents fail to intervene, protect, or hold the aggressor accountable, it creates lasting trauma for the victim and enables the behavior in the abuser. Pushing a 10-year-old down stairs and breaking their arm is not normal sibling rivalry; it’s assault. Minimizing it normalizes abuse and teaches the victim that their pain doesn’t matter.

Trauma specialists emphasize that childhood abuse by a family member often leaves deeper wounds than stranger violence because it shatters the fundamental sense of safety within the home. Survivors frequently carry anxiety, low self-worth, and difficulty trusting others into adulthood — exactly what the woman describes after years of therapy. A half-hearted apology years later, prompted by parents rather than genuine remorse, rarely heals that damage. Without real accountability, amends, and changed behavior, expecting the survivor to “get over it” for family optics is emotionally invalidating and can even retraumatize them.

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On the wedding decision itself: experts in boundary-setting and family estrangement stress that your wedding is not a family reunion or a stage for reconciliation. It is your day to celebrate love and joy with people who genuinely support and respect you. Forcing a survivor to include their abuser — especially one who still dismisses the harm — risks turning a milestone into a source of anxiety or dissociation. Many therapists encourage clients in similar situations to prioritize emotional safety over social obligation.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

The vast majority of people online stood firmly with the bride: they called her decision not only reasonable but courageous.

Most readers condemned the brother’s past actions and the parents’ ongoing minimization:

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shyfidelity − NTA. Your parents didn’t exactly protect you, either. They’re lucky you even want them there.

bythebrook88 − My mom even said, “He was just a kid, he didn’t know any better,” That's because your parents didn't hold him responsible for his actions. I'd think twice...

canyonemoon − NTA. "You need to let the past go" you have physical scars because of that past. He can't erase what he did and he can't erase the scars...

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Mom1274 − …If you were 10 that means he was 13.. .that is not "kids being kids", that was malicious intent to cause harm. Even a 4yr old knows better....

Many urged her to consider cutting contact with the parents as well:

2LegsOverEZ − Your parents are the problem, as is the fact you still have any relationship with them. They chose HIM over YOU your entire life, right up until today.

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forgetregret1day − …He abused you and they did nothing to stop it. You will always bear those physical and emotional scars and you owe them nothing. … If they can’t...

Several offered strong wording she could use:

the_dark_viper − NTA. Here is the message I would group text your parents and brother and post it on social media. Mom, Dad & Tom, As you all know, I...

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Beautiful-Age-1408 − Nta. I'd be disinviting your folks too. … Your folks low key don't respect you, at all.

This story is a painful reminder that not all family ties are healthy, and weddings should never become forced reunions for the sake of appearances. Choosing not to invite someone who physically and emotionally harmed you for years isn’t dramatic — it’s protecting one of the most important days of your life.

Whether you think she should have invited him to “keep the peace” or admire her for finally putting herself first, the scars she carries are real. What would you do if your childhood bully was your sibling and wanted a seat at your wedding? Would you let them in, or draw the same line? Share your thoughts and any similar experiences in the comments!

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