AITA For telling my mom shes a deadbeat?

A 16-year-old boy, the oldest of seven autistic children, primarily cares for his six younger siblings, managing their meltdowns and daily needs while his mother posts online about the “hardships” of parenting autistic kids. People praise her as a “supermom,” which infuriates him since he handles most of the actual support.

What makes the story more complicated is the absent father and the mother’s reaction: after he calmly called her a “deadbeat” who abandons her kids, she “grounded” him ineffectively (needing him for childcare) and enlisted his dad to call him a brat. Tension is now dividing the family, with younger siblings noticing.

‘AITA For telling my mom shes a deadbeat?’

The teen and his six younger siblings all have autism but function relatively well, often looking after each other.

I (16M) have six younger siblings (14M, 13F, 10F 8M, 5F and 3M) all of us have autism. I'm high functioning, with all of my siblings relatively high functioning also.

Some struggle a little more, but we will all be able to cope on our own (the youngest isn't counted right now because he's still developing). We aren't particularly hard...

Honestly, we kind of look after each other because she has no idea what the f__k she's doing. I don't mind it. I really want to go into child care,...

His mother frequently brags online about the challenges, earning praise while he handles meltdowns and bedtime.

Anyway, she often brags on socials about how having seven kids with autism is so hard sometimes, and a lot of people call her supermom because of it. It really...

I've never really suffered from meltdowns, and neither have the next two siblings. She badly dealt with my second sister's meltdowns,

by the time my next brother was having meltdowns I was the only helping him through them, and I do the same for the last two kiddos. I deal with...

Don't get me wrong, helping them does make me happy, but I don't like that she takes the credit. I push myself through overwhelming situations just so I can help...

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After another online rant, he confronted her, calling her a deadbeat; fallout followed with ineffective punishment and family tension.

She went on another of her tangents after I'd put all the kids to bed, going on about how no one understood the stress she was under.

I kindly told her she didn't understand the half of it and she's just a deadbeat mom who has babies and then abandons them.

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She got angry and "grounded me", except she hasn't actually out anything in place because she needs me to watch the kids. My dad told me I was being a...

I told him to f__k off, because he's worse than her (3 y/o literally didn't know he had a dad. He came home crying because his friend had a dad...

This situation reveals severe parentification, where a child assumes adult caregiving roles, often at personal cost. The teen’s extensive responsibilities—managing siblings’ meltdowns, bedtime, and emotional support—far exceed normal helper duties, especially at 16. His enjoyment and career interest don’t negate the unfair burden; parents remain primarily responsible.

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The mother’s social media portrayal as a struggling “supermom” while delegating core parenting exemplifies performative martyrdom, common in some “autism mom” communities. It dismisses the children’s autonomy (they’re described as manageable) and erases the teen’s contributions. The absent father compounds neglect.

Long-term, parentification risks burnout, resentment, and hindered development. The teen’s outburst, while harsh, stems from valid frustration. External support—school counselors, relatives, or services for autistic families—could provide respite and resources. Prioritizing his own future while protecting siblings is crucial.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Many users declared the teen not the asshole, condemning parentification and suggesting reduced help to force parental responsibility.

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[Reddit User] − NTA. You didn't really do anything other than respectfully talk to her. I thought you were gonna say that you commented on one of her online posts....

[Reddit User] − NTA Yes, your mother is a deadbeat. So is your father too. You end up taking care of your siblings and kudos to you.

The mom just is an a__hole for lying to people because people automatically assume all autistic people are hard to deal with and your mom doesn’t really do her job...

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Trilobyte141 − NTA but pick your battles. Your folks both sound like selfish, vain people, but you will never convince them that they need to change their selfish, vain ways....

Your dad will not become a better father for having it pointed out that he is a s__tty one. You should not have to parent your younger siblings, even though...

I hope that they are getting assistance through the schools and with specialists, but I'm going to hazard a guess that your parents are falling short on that front too.

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Bottom line, do whatever it takes to make your life and your siblings lives easier, even if that means ignoring your parents.

The seeds they are sowing now will sprout bitter fruit later, when as adults you and your siblings can tell everyone what they were really like without any fear of...

Fruit-Additional − NTA. Take a couple of weeks off. Do absolutely nothing and let them see what life is really like.

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[Reddit User] − NTA 100% You have to understand your parents are ABUSING you because parentification is a known form of abuse.

I highly recommend you lay off parenting your siblings so that you can have your own life, focus on school, go to college, and eventually move out as soon as...

Several encouraged seeking external help or noted the unusual family autism prevalence.

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Glencora42 − OP - I know you don't want to alert anyone who might call CPS, but you have to talk to an adult about this. Is there a relative...

If so, please tell them what is going on. Tell them how you feel about the situation, and that you need help figuring out how take care of yourself while...

It might turn out that your family is eligible for respite care, so you can have down time to do stuff for yourself. Or that a family member would be...

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You are doing a fabulous job by looking after your siblings, but it will get harder as they get older. If someone can help you start planning now, you have...

[Reddit User] − I (16M) have six younger siblings (14M, 13F, 10F 8M, 5F and 3M) all of us have autism. NTA - your mom (and dad? ) are for...

SG131 − NTA. You keep saying the kids. You’re a kid too! !!! Under no circumstances should you be taking care of your younger siblings like this. It is not...

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Parentification can be very harmful in the long run to kids like you. You need to start taking care of you. Let your mom take care of the other kids...

It will not get better. She will keep having kids until she in no longer able if it’s what she’s used to form her identity.

One sought more details on parental involvement with autism support.

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funklab − The sibling concordance rate for autism is about 14%. This makes the odds of all seven siblings having autism 0.14 to the seventh power. The odds of all...

Someone should do a case study of your family and look at genetics! Either that or maybe it's not autism, it's behavioral problems due to poor parenting... but what do...

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beachygirl12 − INFO: does she not do anything about the autism? Basically, is she is neglectful?

The teenager isn’t the asshole—his parents’ reliance on him for primary caregiving while claiming hardship constitutes neglect and abuse via parentification. Speaking truth, even harshly, doesn’t make him wrong when the burden falls unfairly on a minor.

Have you experienced or witnessed parentification in large families? How can teens in caregiving roles protect their own well-being? Should social services intervene in cases like this? Share your thoughts and advice below.

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