AITA for not personally telling my SIL my husband and I have decided to stop fostering?

Fostering children brought joy and purpose to a couple’s life, but the sudden removal of a beloved foster son they hoped to adopt left their family reeling. Choosing to stop fostering to protect their children, they shared the news quietly—only to face their sister-in-law’s wrath for not telling her face-to-face. Her accusations of abandoning foster kids stirred a bitter family rift, rooted in her own past as a foster child.

This poignant tale of loss and boundaries hums with emotional depth. When does personal trauma justify demanding answers from family?

‘AITA for not personally telling my SIL my husband and I have decided to stop fostering?’

My husband and I (both late 30s) had fostered children for a number of years. We have three young children together and we always kept them in mind while we fostered and we made sure to limit the number of kids we fostered at a time so nobody was displaced.

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Five years ago we had a lovely 2 year old boy placed in our care. We were told he was likely going to be adoptable in the coming years and we were asked if we would be interested. We were absolutely on board with this if it should ever happen.

Three years into fostering her we were told that her biological mother was agreeing to give up all parental rights and allow him to be adopted. Our foster son bonded with all of us and we all bonded with him. The kids saw him as a brother, we saw him as our son and he saw them as his siblings and us as his parents.

We had actually started the process to adopt him a few months ago when the rug was pulled out from under all of us. The case worker decided to remove him from our home and place him with a couple who were looking to foster to adopt. It was devastating and he didn't want to leave.

We asked for reasons why the decision was made and the case worker said it had been decided that he would be better placed with parents who did not have any children. I did push back some and brought up how bonded he was with us all and how excited he was for the adoption and I told her it would devastate him.

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She said he would recover and all would be fine. That he was young. And that they felt this was the best decision no matter how much he wanted to be with us and we wanted him with us. The thing is, with fostering, we always knew something like that could happen.

But we never realized once the adoption process had started after parental rights were terminated that it could happen. This was devasting for all of us and my husband and I agreed we could not risk this again. So we stopped fostering. It was a difficult decision because we loved helping kids.

We loved offering them a safe space. But we couldn't hurt our kids again and the risk was too big considering how badly this was all handled. It wasn't even us who first mentioned adoption to our now former foster son. It was the case worker. I'm going off on a tangent right now. Sorry.

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We didn't say anything to our families for a while and when we did we told a few people who spread the news for us. One of those was my brother and he told his wife (SIL). SIL was angry that I didn't tell her directly myself. She was a foster kid and had been very for us fostering.

When she found out she said I owed it to her to tell her face to face and how dare I stop like that when I could help so many others. I explained to her the reasons but she did not want to hear them. She said there are kids out there with nothing and I'd rather protect kids who have everything. She has mentioned at least three times by now that I should have told her directly and I'm an AH for not doing so. AITA for that?

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The foster system can be a crucible of hope and heartbreak, and this couple’s decision to stop fostering reflects a need to shield their family from further pain. The sister-in-law’s demand for a personal explanation, fueled by her foster care history, projects her unresolved trauma onto their choice. Her accusation—that they’re abandoning needy kids—ignores the emotional toll of their loss and the foster system’s unpredictability.

Family therapist Dr. Elaine Reese notes, “Trauma can distort expectations in family dynamics.” Studies show 50% of foster parents halt due to systemic issues like abrupt removals, as seen here. The SIL’s insistence on direct communication feels entitled, given the couple’s grief, and her criticism dismisses their valid boundaries.

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This highlights broader issues of empathy in family ties. Dr. Reese advises, “Acknowledge shared pain but maintain limits.” The woman should calmly affirm her decision, suggest the SIL explore fostering herself, and limit contact if the criticism persists.

See what others had to share with OP:

Reddit dove into this fostering fallout like it’s a therapy session. Here’s the community’s unfiltered take:

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trashmailaccount00 − NTA. She can foster herself. Nobody is stopping her.

Lucky-Effective-1564 − NTA - it's none of her business. Are you supposed to go around every member of your family and explain your decision in sad detail?

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carrie626 − So sorry for your family’s loss when the adoption process was stopped by the case worker. That does not sound like the child’s best interests were prioritized! Your SIL might have strong feelings about fostering since she was a foster child, but she sounds very reactive and presumptuous to be so adamant that you should have told her directly!

Why does she think you owe her an explanation? She sounds ridiculous!!! I would ask her when she plans to start fostering since she feels so strongly that you should continue fostering! You and your husband are making the decisions that are right for your family- it’s really not your SIL”s business. You are NTAH.

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SweetMaam − I adopted 5 siblings, we were foster parents, 3 adoption no issues, 2 were massive fights with us involvingout staye representative. Depending on your state there are some unique differences, but overall it's very corrupt.

If you challenged the removal you had a 25% chance of successfully adopting your foster son. If you follow up on his case, you'll probably find the agency keeping him in the system until age 9. If your state has open public courts, I recommend you go to his hearings, that's the only way you'll know the truth. NTAH.

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Old-Acanthaceae-327 − NTA. You don't owe her anything.. It's understandable that she has trauma and feels strongly about the foster system.. That doesn't negate your feelings, trauma, and need for self-preservation.. It's a shame she has no empathy for you in this situation and is projecting onto you. You've done nothing wrong. The system has failed you and your foster son. It's ok to have healthy boundaries, in fact it's necessary.

BonusMomSays − NTA. This isnt about SIL and she needs to take her BS drama elsewhere. Your being foster parents will never fix her trauma. It isnt your job and it is wrong of her to try to guilt you into it.. This is about you and your family. Fostering children is draining and demanding.. Noone has a right to tell you that you must continue bejng a foster parent.

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70plusMom − I had a traumatic event happen to me at that age. At 70, I still feel the effects of it. You don’t get over it. You learn to live with it.

Ok-Body-6899 − I hope she's fostering children if she feels so strongly about it?. You're NTA.

Des1225 − The PPW/caseworker is straight trash for that. I work with them a lot. I would’ve went to her supervisor and beyond. That’s NEVER in the best interest of the child. Smh. This pisses me off for you. That baby is NOT a puppy who will go with anyone. He bonded. I am so angry for you

Square-Swan2800 − Whatever state that horror of a worker lives in I hope she was fired. That child will never get over it. I knew someone who was this boy and as an adult he was riddled with depression.. I am so very sorry for all of you.. Your SIL is coming at you from a buried place of childhood pain. If you can, be sympathetic.. You are not the AH but that worker sure is.

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These heartfelt takes resonate, but do they miss nuances? Is the SIL projecting, or just passionate?

This fostering heartbreak turned family clash exposes the raw edges of grief, boundaries, and personal history. The couple’s quiet exit from fostering, met with their SIL’s fiery demands, raises questions about empathy and obligation. What would you do if a relative judged your painful choice? Drop your stories in the comments—let’s unravel this emotional family tangle!

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