AITAH for telling my wife my sister doesn’t have to help us?

A father is caught between his desperately ill daughter and a decade-old family fracture that refuses to heal. Years ago, at 16, he stole $1,000 in tip money his 19-year-old sister was saving from her waitressing job. He paid it back two years later, but the betrayal was deep enough that she cut off him and their parents completely — and never looked back.

Now his young daughter has cancer, insurance falls short, and every other source of help has dried up. In a moment of pure desperation, his wife tracked the sister down and showed up at her apartment begging for financial help. The sister laughed, said “tough shit,” and shut the door. His wife came home in tears, furious that he wouldn’t pressure his sister or “make it up to her” to change her mind. He told his wife the truth: his sister has no obligation to help — especially after everything. Was he wrong to stand firm?

‘AITAH for telling my wife my sister doesn’t have to help us?’

The rift began when he was a teenager:

When I was 16, I stole about 1000 from my sister. She was 19 and working as a waitress. This was her tip money that she was saving. I paid...

This event cause my sister to move out of the family home. My parents punished me (took away electronics, grounded me for a year, and had me write an apology...

My parents didn't have the extra money to pay her. My sister told them to go to hell. She still doesn't speak to either me or our parents. My daughter...

every family member and every stranger asking for help to pay for her treatment. Our insurance doesn't cover enough. My wife decided to track my sister down. She discovered that...

She has remained no-contact for years, with only one distant uncle as loose family connection:

My wife knows about the stealing, and she knows my sister does not speak to me or our parents. As far as I am aware, she only speaks to one...

When I came home from work yesterday, my wife was sitting in the kitchen crying. I asked what was wrong, was it our daughter etc.

His wife took action without telling him:

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My wife told me she had gone to my sister's apartment asking her for help with our daughter's medical bills, knowing she could afford it. My sister had laughed in...

My wife tried knocking again, and my sister had yelled through the door for her to leave or she was calling the cops. My wife is increadibly upset. She thinks...

I told my wife she is not obligated to help and why would she if she doesn't speak to me or anybody close to me? My wife called me an...

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I told her this is not happening and if my sister ever wishes to speak to me, it would be on her initiative.. We are now not speaking. AITA?

Desperation in the face of a child’s serious illness can override almost every boundary — including long-standing estrangements. Parents in this position often feel entitled to any possible lifeline, even when logic says otherwise. That emotional surge is understandable, but it doesn’t create moral or legal obligations for others.

Family therapists and ethicists emphasize that money is never owed simply because someone has it, especially not to people who caused deep harm years earlier. The sister’s decision to go no-contact after a serious betrayal (theft of her hard-earned savings at 19) was a valid boundary. Forcing or guilting contact now — particularly to ask for a large sum — almost always backfires and deepens resentment.

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From the sister’s perspective, the wife’s visit likely felt like manipulation: “You ignored me for years after you stole from me, and now you only appear when you want something.” That perception is hard to overcome.

Professionals working with estranged families advise focusing energy on available resources — hospital financial counselors, pediatric cancer charities (e.g., St. Jude, Alex’s Lemonade Stand, local foundations), payment plans, or even medical fundraising campaigns — rather than chasing reconciliation that may never happen. Couples therapy can also help partners navigate the intense grief and blame that often surface in medical crises without destroying the marriage.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

The Reddit community responded with near-universal support for the husband and sympathy for the sister’s position.

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Most people agreed the sister has zero obligation:

CrystalQueen3000 − NTA You’re completely right, I can understand your wife’s desperation but your sister is a total stranger to her

[Reddit User] − NTA. You’re 100% correct. Even if on good terms she would have no obligation to give you money. Wife can ask as she did. Sister can decline...

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[Reddit User] − NTA - It’s your sister not hers, your sister doesn’t have any obligation to cover expenses for you or your children.

I know it’s quite tough and I’m so sorry for the situation you’re in but you’re not the bad guy here and I wish you the best with everything and...

Cautious-Classroom48 − …Even if she hadn't been no contact with your entire family for her whole adult life, she still wouldn't be obligated to pay. The last thing your family...

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shammy_dammy − NTA. Your sister is completely done with you and your parents. She's not obligated to do anything. You can't 'make it up to her'. Even if you tried,...

WillSayAnything − NTA You took $1000 from a 19 year old waitress… Your sister did the former and I don't really blame her.

Many expressed understanding for the wife’s desperation but criticized her actions:

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Poorchick91 − …I'd be pissed at my partner if they contacted someone I have not spoken to in years to ask for money. No matter the reason… given the history...

Material_Cellist4133 − Wow your wife is a major a__hole. I understand the pain of the mother but to be entitled to someone money (and that person who you’ve already stolen...

Several commenters suggested practical next steps and sympathy for the daughter’s situation:

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Cautious-Classroom48 − If you haven't, maybe talk to her doctors about other financial resources that might be available, like charities… F__k capitalism and the insurance industry.

Ok-meow − Just because some owns a restaurant doesn’t mean they are doing well… Time for one of you to get a job with better insurance. Or consider contacting the...

No-Anteater1688 − …I hope you can find some sort of charities or pharmaceutical programs to get the child what she needs.

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A few asked for more context about the original rift:

Takeme2yourrleader − Was there other issues? It seems like we are missing something. After you paid her back she still didnt speak to her parents. That seems odd. Were you...

Testy-North-1231 − Info: Were you the golden child? It seems that the theft of her money was just the last straw for your sister if she cut all of you...

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This is a heartbreaking collision of past betrayal and present desperation. The sister’s hard “no” feels cruel when a child is sick — but she owes nothing to people who stole from her, dismissed her pain, and only reappeared when they needed money. The wife’s actions came from love and fear, yet crossed serious boundaries.

You were right to say your sister isn’t obligated. No one can force reconciliation or generosity. The real path forward lies in medical charities, hospital aid programs, and — if possible — couples counseling to help you and your wife carry this unbearable weight together. What would you do next if you were in this family’s shoes?

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