AITA for telling my mom my brothers disease doesn’t excuse his behavior and to stop bringing up me not visiting brother in the hospital after his surgery?

She’s been called a “terrible sister” for five years over one decision she made at 13. The crime? Not rushing to the hospital the same night her younger brother woke up from major heart surgery.

Now 18, she’s finally pushing back. Her brother was born with heart disease and has undergone two major surgeries. But according to her, his medical condition has become a permanent shield—one her parents use to excuse his explosive temper, violent outbursts, and deeply disrespectful behavior. Every time she defends herself, the past gets dragged out again. This time, she snapped and told her mom exactly how she feels.

‘AITA for telling my mom my brothers disease doesn’t excuse his behavior and to stop bringing up me not visiting brother in the hospital after his surgery?’

She begins by describing what life at home has been like:

I (18F) have a little brother (13) who has heart disease and has had two surgeries to treat it. My parents have never disciplined him in any way whatsoever since...

and he has grown to be the most entitled, selfish, disrespectful, and attention-seeking person I have ever met. He regularly screams at my parents calling them stupid, and when he...

He literally can’t do anything by himself, and yells at our parents to do everything for him. None of our cousins can stand him because he has cussed or hit...

and to be honest, neither can I. My parents barely reprimand him no matter what he does. He is beyond coddled.

She then explains what happened five years ago during his last surgery:

So his last surgery was five years ago, when I was 13 and since my parents were always at the hospital with him, I was sent to one of my...

He had to be sedated for the surgery since it is quite major, and when he woke up, my mom called me and asked if I wanted to go to...

I asked if I could go tomorrow instead for multiple reasons: it was very late and the hospital was close to an hour away,

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I was tired after a day of school and practice, and hospitals at night scared me. I know I should’ve gone to see him that night, but I was just...

But that single decision has followed her ever since:

Since then, every time my brother screams, cusses, or hits me and I retaliate, my mom tells me to be quiet and brings up how I didn’t go to visit...

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She’ll say things like “You must really hate your brother since you didn’t go see him.” or “You’re such a terrible sister, you never cared about him at all.” She...

I yelled at her to stop bringing it up because it didn’t mean I don’t care about him and because it happened so long ago. I also shouted that I...

Despite standing up for herself, she still feels conflicted:

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I feel bad for saying all this because I know my parents feel guilty about him being born with heart disease and that not disciplining him and getting him anything...

EDIT: my dad is much much worse than my mom and won’t hear a negative word against my brother. He wanted to kick me out after Christmas I told him...

Families dealing with chronic illness often face complicated emotional dynamics. Parents may carry immense guilt, especially when a child is born with a serious medical condition. That guilt can quietly shape their parenting choices. In some cases, it leads to overprotection and a reluctance to enforce boundaries out of fear of being “too hard” on a child who has already suffered.

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However, compassion doesn’t mean eliminating accountability. According to family therapist Dr. Susan Forward, author of Emotional Blackmail, repeatedly using past events to induce guilt is a form of emotional manipulation. When a decision made at 13 is weaponized for five consecutive years, the issue shifts from concern to control.

There’s also a well-known family pattern sometimes described as the “golden child” and the “scapegoat.” One child becomes untouchable, protected at all costs, while the other absorbs frustration and blame. Over time, this imbalance can damage both children. The favored child may struggle with entitlement and poor self-regulation, while the other may internalize guilt or resentment.

At 18, building emotional and financial independence may be an important step for her well-being. Seeking counseling—whether through school or privately—could help unpack years of accumulated guilt. Most importantly, illness may explain certain limitations, but it does not justify abuse. Speaking up about unfair treatment does not make her heartless. It makes her human.

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Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Many commenters immediately supported her:

[Reddit User] − NTA. Your mother is manipulative, emotionally abusive and an enabler.

Malaeveolent_Bunny − NTA. Your parents have raised an entitled narcissist, that's not your fault. Sure, they are terrified that any day could be his last and don't want to regret...

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Honestly it sounds like they have come close to abandoning you and have completely denied your brother the necessary growth to make his way in the wider world. Have you...

MurkyDetective6020 − NTA. I foresee the following: your brother hits one of your parents hard at some point and they will be wondering how he turned out this way. And...

HamHockMcGee − NTA. Wow you are the s__pegoat of the family. Sending you to r/raisedbynarcissists Enjoy your healing journey.

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Some shared personal experiences that echoed her story:

tyson_de − My god. ..there are so many parallels to my older sister and your brother. We both grew up with rare medical conditions, all we need to do though...

This resulted in two kidney transplants (the first failed because she didn't take care of herself) she will be 43 this month, lives with my parents and has some serious...

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My mom tried guilting me my whole life but I refused to let it affect me. You are NTA and I know what you're going through. Everytime I pointed out...

double standards etc I heard "well she's sick. " Her and I don't have a relationship, I say hi when I visit my parents but that's about it. I feel...

W1ldth1ng − NTA, I would try to find a person you trust to talk to about this, if you are at school is there a guidance officer or counsellor who...

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The parents told me she had to go to bed at 8:30. So at 8:30 I told her it was time for bed and boy did she carry on. I...

She then told me if I didn't let her stay up she would scream until she got sick. I replied, "Fine I will ring your parents to come home. "...

When she was quiet I went back to check, she said she was sick I said "I will get your parents to come home to you. " She screamed again...

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Next time I babysat her she went to bed when told she realised I would let her scream the house down before I gave in to her demands. Found out...

[Reddit User] − NTA. Your parents are abusive. .. Seriously, is your mother named Petunia Dursley?

desert_red_head − NTA. It happened 5 years ago, your brother was not near death, and you had valid excuses for not wanting to go that evening. Your family sounds truly...

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Downtown-Squirrel-22 − I told him he failed raising my brother You're right, he did. Him having a disease does not excuse his behavior nor your parents for allowing him to...

OP, I'm sorry your parents are awful to you. btw you didn't 'not visit him'. you just didn't go that second. it's not that big of a deal that ALL...

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THIRTEEN YEARS OLD. If you can/want, go NC for a bit. it can be exhausting and mentally draining to hear nothing but negativity and blame.

ExitAlarmed5992 − **Damn girl! !!** **utmost respect to you for telling your dad he failed raising a kid** **utmost respect of the highest order to you** Hurry up get an...

No-Carpenter8359 − NTA your parents have messed up raising your brother. A parents job is to guide their children to where their children become functioning adults who can take care...

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Your brother will not be a functioning adult because with his behavior no one will want to be around him. He will probably remain with Your parents, who when they...

You already know you can't stand to be around him and will certainly not want to step into the place of Your parents dealing with him. What happens to him...

Laramila − So, something you did when *you* were 13 was a definitive indication of *your* character and personality, but *literally every single thing he's been doing at the same...

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Others urged her to prioritize independence:

Wolfy-Corpse − NTA - Your parents have utterly failed both you and your brother. Their behaviour has guaranteed their son will have a miserable life, despised by everyone he meets....

Sadly your parents will likely keep taking out their frustrations for their inadequacy out on you. You do not deserve to be punished for the failures of your parents. Your...

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They will realise that your brother has become incapable of looking after himself and that he will need looking after for the rest of his life.

As they get older they will try and force you to live with your brother and be his carer once they are too old. Plan your independence as you will...

ToshenRaz − NTA at all, like 100% nope, don't feel bad you are grounded in reality, and need to stay there. Tho never let someone's situation allow them to abuse...

Your brother is going to act a fool one day and someone is going to reset his persona forcefully. I would say if anything you are/could be a good influence...

lanibgoode − nta. for all the reasons others said, but also for this: when they have to fully sedate you for surgery, you probably won't remember anything at all from...

your mom is abusing you over a period of time that may as well not even exist for your brother. start making plans to get away. make sure you have...

One choice made at 13 has been used as leverage for years. Meanwhile, repeated aggression and disrespect are brushed aside in the name of illness. It’s no surprise the tension has finally boiled over.

Illness deserves empathy—but does it excuse cruelty? And how long should one sibling carry the weight of parental guilt? If you were in her place, would you keep enduring it, or start planning your way out?

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