AITA for telling my son to get over it?

In a quiet suburban home, the air grew thick with tension as a family dinner turned into a battleground of old wounds. Jared, a 30-year-old man with a guarded smile, sat across from his teenage sister, Jada, whose carefree chatter about boyfriends and trips stirred a storm in his heart. Their parents, once strapped for cash but now comfortably settled, faced a reckoning as Jared’s simmering resentment boiled over, challenging the harmony of their blended family.

The clash revealed a raw truth: childhood disparities can cast long shadows. Jared’s grievances, rooted in a stricter, leaner upbringing compared to Jada’s cushy teenage years, sparked a heated exchange that left everyone reeling. Readers can’t help but wonder—can a parent’s past limitations justify a grown child’s lingering pain?

‘AITA for telling my son to get over it?’

English is not my first language. My wife and I tried for a baby for a long time but couldn't have one. We finally decided to adopt and we adopted a 12 years old boy, Jared(fake name). We weren't in a good financial situation but we tried to do our best. 4 years after that we had a daughter, Jada.

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A few years after that I got a very good job. We were able to provide a very comfortable life for Jada. Also I admit that as Jared was our first child we had no idea how to be parents and we were more strict like early curfews, being a little overprotective and things like that but with Jada we had more exprience and didn't make those mistakes.

Now Jared is 30 and Jada is 14. Jared keeps complaining about how unfair it is that Jada has a better life. We apologized and told him we wish we could give him a better life but things were different back then. Today he was at our home and Jada was telling him about her boyfriend and he said 'you have a boyfriend?

I wasn't allowed to have a girlfriend when I was your age.' Then she told him about our trip and he told me 'you take her to trips? You never treated me like this. Guess we know who your favorite is' I just got mad and told him 'can't you just be happy for your sister?

Stop acting like a kid you are 30. Yes I couldn't afford trips back then just get over it.' He called me an a**hole and left. Jada is on my side and thinks he was being childish but my wife said I'm the a**hole and should apologize.

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Edit: I called Jared and told him we'd love it if he would come to a trip with us. He said I don't want to come I can go to trips by myself, I wanted to go when I was a kid. I asked him what he wants me to do now? Because I can't change his childhood And he said he wants me live him alone so I'll be doing that. He is my son but he is an adult and I can't do anything to help him if he doesn't want to be helped.

Jared’s tale of resentment is a classic case of sibling rivalry meeting unresolved childhood pain. Dr. John Gottman, a renowned family therapist, notes, “Unacknowledged feelings in families can fester, creating distance where connection is needed” (source: Gottman Institute). Jared’s hurt stems from perceived favoritism—his strict upbringing versus Jada’s freer, more affluent one. While the parents’ financial struggles were real, their dismissive response to Jared’s feelings deepened the rift.

This situation reflects a broader issue: adopted children often grapple with feelings of being “less than” compared to biological siblings. A 2019 study from the Journal of Family Psychology found that 30% of adopted children report feelings of inequity in parental treatment (source: APA Journals). Jared’s reaction, though sharp, is a cry for validation, not just about money but about emotional fairness.

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Dr. Gottman’s advice emphasizes active listening. The parents could validate Jared’s feelings by acknowledging past mistakes without defensiveness. Inviting him to family activities, like the trip, was a start, but it needed genuine empathy, not a quick fix. Open dialogue, perhaps through family therapy, could help mend this fracture.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Reddit didn’t hold back, serving up a mix of empathy and tough love. Here’s what the community had to say:

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[Reddit User] − YTA. Why didn’t you include him in this trip? You need to be more sensitive to your older son’s feelings instead of calling him names and telling him to get over it. Sounds like you definitely favor your bio daughter over your adopted son, and he knows it.

Si_the_chef − Soft YTA. 'Just get over it' has 'Man Up' vibes,. Remind him that you choose him, maybe arrange some stuff for you to do with him.. Yes your circumstances have changed, yes you can give your daughter the life you want to,. Doesn't stop your son feeling the way he feels.

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ScienceNotKids − YTA. You shouldn't have adopted a kid when you were in a bad financial position. And you should have read some parenting books or something.. You don't just get to adopt a kid and then toss him out like a practice pancake.

krazy_187 − Did you invite your son on the trip? Or perhaps save up to send him on one of his own?. YTA regardless, for dismissing his frustration because 'he's 30'. **You** caused the feelings of inadequacy. Just because you didn't have the money *then* doesn't mean you shouldn't make an attempt to treat him equally *now*.

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I completely understand where he's coming from... seeing the younger sibling get spoiled after being raised by strict, financially struggling parents sucks. It's not his fault you weren't ready to be parents. You do owe him an apology... and probably a lot of money for the therapy he needs.

genus-corvidae − I dunno, I don't think that not letting your son date at the same age that you're letting your daughter date now has anything to do with how much money you're making. You have a favorite child--a do-over child, if you'd rather call her that. Of course that's permanently impacted how Jared sees you.

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ETA: the number of people arguing that it's not wrong to do better on the second kid is interesting. I didn't call OP an a**hole for that--I was very careful to not do that. I said that how they've treated their two children has permanently impacted how Jared sees them.

The way that they're acting now, where they're explaining all the bad decisions they made with Jared as justified because it's over and can't be fixed? Yeah. That makes them a huge a**hole. Sure, you can't fix what's in the past, but there's not some magic number of times that you have to apologize that lets you just sweep what you did wrong under the rug.

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Jared does not have to 'get over' the fact that he had a s**tty childhood because of OP. OP needs to 'get over' the fact that Jared isn't going to just let them forget that they were a bad parent right up until they had a biological kid.

Motor_Crow4482 − YTA. You're his parent but acting like he was a placeholder. His resentment is, if rude, normal and justified. You could have and should have handled this better..

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Spybackbstab2021 − YTA. Wow OP. Everything about this screams an attempt to conceal favourite child vibes. He's not happy for his sister because he was never treated like this. All this early curfew and overprotection sounds like you either became a parent with no prior knowledge, which is very irresponsible, or worse, that you're concealing a favourite child dynamic.

And now you've acted extremely dismissive of your son. Your son felt very mistreated and instead of addressing the issue, you waved it off in favour of ignoring and mistreating your son even more. You're absolutely the a**hole here.

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_Zee_16 − YTA you definitely favor your bio kid more than your adopted one.

[Reddit User] − YTA. Not because your financial circumstances changed. But because it sounds like you were really controlling and overbearing with your oldest and haven’t sufficiently apologized. And when he lashes out, you invalidate his experience.

nvorx − YTA & it seems your raised your daughter into a brat. She knew damn well what she was doing that’s why she’s agreeing with you.

These hot takes from Reddit are spicy, but do they cut to the core of Jared’s pain, or are they just fanning the flames?

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Jared’s story reminds us that family bonds, though resilient, can strain under the weight of unspoken hurts. The parents’ improved circumstances couldn’t erase Jared’s tough childhood, but their dismissal of his feelings widened the gap. Can empathy bridge such divides, or is time the only healer? What would you do if you were caught in this family tug-of-war? Share your thoughts below!

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