AITAH for telling my brother in law he can’t come to Disneyland with my family?

A 5-year-old girl’s long-awaited Disneyland trip for her birthday is causing major family tension. The girl’s parents planned the vacation as a core-family experience — just the three of them — because both parents dislike crowds and kid attractions but want to make their daughter happy after she’s talked about it nonstop since her best friend went last summer.

The trouble started when the mother casually mentioned the plan to her brother-in-law (“Jim”), who has been a very involved “fun uncle” to the girl for years. Jim immediately asked to join, offering to pay his own way and help with rides so the parents could get breaks. The mother said no, wanting the trip to stay private family time. Now her sister and mother are pressuring her to reconsider, arguing that Jim needs this for his mental health and that denying him could affect his ability to cope with life at home. Is she the asshole for holding firm?

‘AITAH for telling my brother in law he can’t come to Disneyland with my family?’

The family dynamic has been complicated for years:

The BIL (Jim) in question is the husband of my sister, Sally. Jim and Sally have a 7 year old daughter, Daisy. Daisy was born with a neurological disorder that...

She is non verbal, experiences developmental delays, and is unable to walk or take care of herself physically. This has been hard on Jim and Sally, completely understandably.

Me and my husband have a daughter, Poppy (5). Sally and I have had a more distant relationship since she was born, because Sally admitted she finds it hard to...

We were close as a foursome when poppy was a baby but since she was about 2 Sally has been quite absent. I don’t blame her for this at all,...

Jim has been unusually present as an uncle:

But while Sally has been distant, Jim has been a really present uncle. He comes to Poppy’s ballet recitals, and has stepped in to give Poppy rides when my husband...

He’s chaperoned her birthday parties and even gotten tickets to things she’s liked over the years (it was ice shows for a while, the ballet, etc.).

There’s been moments where it’s been a bit annoying, Jim offering opinions on parenting or wanting to come over on weekends where it’s not even a family event, but generally,

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we’ve appreciated his involvement because I always envisaged extended family being active in Poppy’s life, that’s part of why we live close to family. He’s a good guy and he...

The author reassures readers there’s no safety concern:

I just want to add here, because I know that often on here people just to the worst possible conclusion, Jim is a good guy and I have no worries...

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She’s a precocious little girl who knows her boundaries and has very loose lips, can’t keep a secret from either me or my husband to save her life. It’s not...

The Disneyland plan was meant to be intimate:

But about a week ago I was talking to Jim casually about Poppy’s birthday (we’re doing a family dinner with aunts, uncles, and grandparents) and how we were thinking of...

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We’ve put it off this long because both my husband and I are really bad with crowds and lines, and actually aren’t big on kid stuff in general so this...

but Poppy’s best friend went last summer and she hasn’t stopped talking about it so it’s probably time to just suck it up and go.

Jim immediately asked to join:

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I joked about this to Jim and he floated the idea of him coming with us on the trip. He said he’d pay for himself of course but that way...

I said no thanks, because as much as I love Jim I just don’t want to go on vacation with him (idk if maybe I’m being a bit of a...

Sally then escalated the pressure:

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Sally later called me, which is unusual, I don’t hear from her much. She asked me if I would reconsider letting Jim come to Disneyland.

She said both she and Jim get extremely depressed about the parts of parenthood they’re missing out on, and it really helps Jim’s mental health to be a little bit...

She said it’s not any cost to me to just let him come along and be an extra pair of hands, considering I’m dreading going anyway. I said I just...

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She said Poppy loves Jim (she does, he’s a classic Fun Uncle) and this would be beneficial for everyone is he goes with us. I felt like she kind of...

I said I’d think about it. Then she went to my mom, who is now sort of on her side (she’s not pushing, just saying I should seriously consider it)....

EDIT: for anyone wondering if Jim spends time with Daisy to give Sally a break, yes he does. He and Sally alternate evenings after work looking after Daisy so the...

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They also alternate weekends. Sally just chooses to spend her “breaks” seeing her friends and doing self care activities.

This situation is layered and painful. Jim’s involvement with Poppy is genuinely kind — he’s been a supportive uncle in ways many children never experience. But the pattern (wanting to join family trips, inserting himself into non-family events, offering parenting opinions) has shifted from generous to emotionally dependent. When a person relies on a child (even indirectly) to fill a void caused by grief or loss in their own parenting experience, it risks turning that child into an emotional support figure — an unfair burden.

The sister’s argument (“it helps Jim’s mental health”) is honest but inappropriate. Mental health support should come from therapy, support groups, or peer connections — not from borrowing someone else’s healthy child as a stand-in. The implication that denying Jim this trip could destabilize his ability to stay in his marriage is manipulative and places unfair pressure on the OP.

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Family therapist Dr. Becky Kennedy (Good Inside) often speaks about how grief and “missed milestones” can lead parents of disabled children to seek surrogate experiences through other people’s kids. While understandable, it is not the OP’s responsibility to manage Jim’s emotional needs. The Disneyland trip is a core-family memory for Poppy and her parents — one they are already sacrificing comfort to create. Saying no is not cruel; it is protecting the sanctity of that experience.

The OP is not the asshole for wanting privacy on a once-in-a-lifetime family trip. She can continue to welcome Jim’s involvement in appropriate ways (recitals, birthdays, local outings) while setting a clear boundary around vacations. Therapy (for Jim, Sally, or even the whole extended family) could help everyone process these complex feelings without using a 5-year-old as the emotional bridge.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

The Reddit community overwhelmingly said NTA, with many expressing serious concern about Jim’s emotional reliance on Poppy.

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Most readers saw red flags in Jim’s attachment and supported the boundary:

Perimentalpause − NTA. Jim is using Poppy as a replacement daughter. That really sucks for Sally and Daisy, tbh. … Jim is the uncle, through marriage. He's not your brother....

Proud-Geek1019 − NTA. Tread carefully - Jim is using Poppy in lieu of therapy he (and your sister) likely need. His mental health cannot rely on the shoulders of a...

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MelG146 − NTA. … Jim is forming an unhealthy attachment to your daughter, in that he is inserting himself into the "parent" lane because he can't have these same experiences...

WomanInQuestion − NTA - he’s using your daughter as a stand-in for his child. He’s pretending to be a parent of “a normal child” as a coping mechanism for having...

Many emphasized the right to private family time:

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Apart-Ad-6518 − NTA I can empathize/SIL may be right but that isn't on you & wanting a holiday with just the 3 of you is totally ok. Your mom shouldn't...

Plastic-Map500 − OP one of the things I noticed is that when you got pushback, you immediately started to question yourself because you didn't think your reasons were important.

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I just wanted to let you know that your feelings are important too, no matter how bad anyone else has it. You matter. Your family unit matters. You dont owe...

JazPrncess1 − NTA. You’re entitled to your opinion and feelings. You should be allowed to experience this trip in a manner that you choose and your brother needs to accept...

A few expressed sympathy for Jim and Sally but still backed the boundary:

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Jesiplayssims − Sounds like he wants to experience the joys of being around a "normal" child". OP gets to decide which events she is comfortable with, if any, as it...

NUredditNU − NTA. Whatever Sally and Jim or missing is in Sally and Jim to sort with themselves and their therapist. Your mom is WAY out of line.

Jim’s heavy involvement has clearly crossed from generous uncle to emotional stand-in, and your sister’s pressure (and your mom’s siding) is unfair. You don’t need a “good enough” reason beyond simply wanting family-only time. Saying no now protects the trip and sets a healthy boundary for the future. You can still welcome Jim at recitals, birthdays, and local outings — but vacations are for your immediate family. You’re allowed to prioritize your daughter’s experience without guilt. What do you think — should she hold firm on the no, or is there a middle ground that feels right?

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