AITA for asking my BIL where his sense of entitlement comes from?

Blended families can be complicated even in the best circumstances, but when there’s a long history of instability, those complications cut deeper. In this case, a woman watched her sister cycle through relationship after relationship, each one leaving lasting emotional damage on her children. By the time those kids were grown, they had learned one hard lesson well: protect yourself first.

So when her sister remarried yet again, and her new husband suddenly decided everyone should fall in line and act like one big happy family, tensions exploded. A private conversation turned confrontational, an accusation of entitlement was thrown out, and the fallout spilled onto social media. Readers quickly jumped in, debating whether family can ever be demanded, or if respect for past trauma should come first.

AITA for asking my BIL where his sense of entitlement comes from?

Years of instability shaped the family dynamic long before this confrontation ever happened

My sister has known her husband for about a year and they got married 2 months ago. My sister has a very bad dating history. She has two kids with...

and 18 years old and out of her house (they moved in with my parents a year ago actually after my sister broke a promise to them that she'd wait...

Their whole lives they have known a revolving door of men, some of them were husbands albeit briefly, but still. They lived with 11 guys who were not their bio...

Sometimes those guys had kids or sometimes he'd move in with parents. Three of them were husbands. The rest were partners/boyfriends. It really fucked the kids up because not all...

sometimes they were pressured to act like one big family unit if the guy had kids. My sister wouldn't listen to anyone who told her she needed to slow down...

The latest relationship followed the same rapid timeline

So my sister and BIL met a year ago, my sister moved him in after 2.5 months of dating, him and his kids, and her kids moved out before they...

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When they got married my sisters kids didn't show, actually none of us did. We don't support this and with no young kids to support through the mess we've decided...

BIL was apparently pissed at my sister's kids on behalf of his kids who wanted to see them again (they met once or twice before the whole move out/move in...

and they ignored him and blocked him. So then he decided to reach out to me and say he wanted to talk about something "important" so I agreed to meet...

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Then he turned his attention to the poster

He told me I needed to get my sister's kids to stop being s__tty and take part in their family. He told me I owed it to him to do...

I asked where his sense of entitlement comes from thinking he can tell me and my sister's kids what to do. I told him they are none of his business.

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He told me they are when they're supposed to be getting to know his kids and being good older siblings to them instead of acting like they don't exist and...

The exchange ended with accusations and blocked numbers

He told me I was looking to take what he says in a negative light and I was wrong to call him entitled out of nowhere. I left him after...

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When I went to block him he had sent me several messages already and told me I was an a__hole for the entitled question because he's looking out for his...

This conflict highlights a common mistake in blended families: assuming proximity equals obligation. The sister’s children are adults who spent their childhood adapting to constant upheaval. For them, distance isn’t rebellion, it’s survival. Expecting instant emotional investment ignores the cumulative weight of past instability.

From the brother-in-law’s perspective, he may genuinely believe he’s advocating for his children. Wanting connection isn’t inherently wrong. The problem lies in how that desire was expressed. Demanding compliance, assigning blame, and recruiting extended family to enforce relationships rarely leads to trust. It usually reinforces resistance.

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Family therapist Dr. Lindsay Gibson has noted that adult children from emotionally unstable homes often “learn to disengage as a form of self-protection, not punishment.” That insight applies here. The sister’s kids didn’t cut contact to hurt anyone. They stepped away because history taught them that boundaries are safer than hope.

A healthier approach would involve patience, curiosity, and respect for autonomy. Instead of asking “Why won’t they show up?” the more productive question is “What have they been through?” Blended families succeed when connections are invited, not enforced. Repair takes time, consistency, and humility, none of which can be demanded on someone else’s timeline.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Many readers immediately sided with the poster, emphasizing autonomy and trauma

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mdthomas − Your sister's older children are adults and get to choose with whom they associate. It sounds like both your sister

and her husband have been shopping around for new family members. I would be willing to bet her older children have A LOT of resentment towards her. NTA

TopTierUsers − NTA. Good job standing your ground! Her 2 kids are now just other humans to your BIL and his kids. Like the people we see on the bus...

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He needs to accept this. Mom made her choices, over and over, to prioritize her happiness above her children’s emotional needs.

I hope the kids can find a good therapist. Kudos to your parents for stepping up and taking them in!

CandylandCanada − NTA. Keep your focus on sister's kids, as you've been doing (and apparently the only one in your family who has any concern about them).

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Those chickens always come home to roost; when they do, it's going to be a wild ride for your sister. Sister, **current** husband (current, because he needs a temporal label)...

CanAhJustSay − NTA. Glad to see that your sister's children are making difficult but better decisions in terms of who they allow into their loves. Stay being supportive to your...

Sounds like they have had a tough ride so far but can see a way through now. Who knows - this might be lucky number 13 (incl. bio dad) for...

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Others were more blunt about the brother-in-law’s attitude

Legal-Lingonberry577 − LOL NTA I would have told Mr. 12 that he's not family, but nothing more than a stepping stone in a long line of bad decisions.

otsukaren_613 − LOL HE WANTS A BABYSITTER. F that. NTA.

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chrono_explorer − NTA, sounds like he just wants free labor from you and your family.

Slayerofdrums − NTA. I never understand how some guys seem to 'demand' that their new partner's kids treat him like he is their new dad without even investing in the...

It's not instant dad instant family. ...it takes a lot of work to make a family, esp if the kids are traumatized by past experiences.

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Some comments called out the sister’s role directly

[Reddit User] − NTA families aren't lego pieces that you can just take and stick together willy nilly. He has no appreciation of all the s__tty "family" history those two...

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jrm1102 − NTA - your anger really should be directed at your sister at the end of the day. At least this guy thinks hes trying to do the right...

and I doubt your sister was honest about her long dating history. But you are right, he has no right to demand you do anything.

[Reddit User] − Does "getting to know" translate into "free babysitting"? NTA. Someone needs to advocate for her neglected kids.

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[Reddit User] − NTA your concern for your sister's kids, given their rough history with her relationships, isvalid. Your BIL expecting you to get involved

and make the kids embrace his family, especially after such a short time, is presumptuous. It’s only natural to be protective of your family, and questioning his demands was justified.

[Reddit User] − NtA He’s sharing a notable lack of empathy here. Quite telling. His question is “this is how this should be, or else! ” and not “I wonder...

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They are well worth each other (but I trust this lack of empathy to soon reach your sister. unfortunately). This whole thing sucks for the kids, but a little less...

BooRoWo − Info - how old are his kids? It sounds like he’s more interested in having your Niblings become free babysitters for his kids

This situation isn’t about politeness or tone, it’s about boundaries earned through experience. The sister’s children spent years adapting to instability, and choosing distance is their right. While blended families can be beautiful, they can’t be forced into existence by demands or guilt. The poster’s question may have been sharp, but it reflected a deeper truth: family isn’t something you order into place. What matters most is respecting the people who already paid the emotional cost. What would you have said in that meeting?

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