WIBTA for telling my mother that I won’t look after HER other child for the rest of my life?

What would you say if your parents handed you their adult child to raise—along with the mortgage? A 21-year-old faces exactly that after her grandmother’s death, caught between family duty and her own future.

The plan involves paying bills, sharing inheritance unfairly, and becoming a permanent caretaker. Countless young adults grapple with similar expectations that threaten independence.

‘WIBTA for telling my mother that I won’t look after HER other child for the rest of my life?’

The family dynamics set the stage early on.

So I (21F) have one sister (23F), for the sake of the story we’ll call Amy, whom I love dearly but despite being older, has a lot less life experience...

She’s never had a job, I’ve been working since I was 15, she stays inside playing video games all day, I make an effort to be social, she still lives...

Amy’s always been mother’s favorite, our mothers has narcissistic tendencies and while Amy cradles her, I have a habit of sticking up for myself which obviously mother dearest didn’t like.

They’ve always spoiled her, like how she got a PS5 the same year I went without a school laptop because they couldn’t afford both. I hate that in some ways...

A recent death triggered major changes.

Anyway, our grandmother passed away recently and my mother decided that I was to move in her house and pay the rates and the bills while they sell there’s

and go live the “van” lifestyle for a while (this story would be 10x longer if I got into all that so I won’t) and that my sister would come...

Unequal treatment fuels the conflict.

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The issue isn’t her living there, I do love Amy and we’ve gotten along as adults the issue is they’re building her a 10 grand art studio in the yard,...

along with everything else of our grandmothers, it didn’t matter how much it meant to me if she wanted it; she got it and all because “they want her to...

Long-term expectations create pressure.

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There’s also the fact that I don’t want to live in this town forever, or take care of my sister forever. I need to be able to have my own...

And she can’t take care of ourselves because she’s never bothered to get a job or go to university? I understand that my parent want their own lives too but...

In my eyes if you choose to be a parent it’s a life long commitment even if the kids are adults sometimes things happen and you have to be prepared...

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Financial plans fail to address fairness.

I brought up the finance issues and they just said they’d put a trust in Amy’s name to help with the house, which is fine I guess but they’re still...

Amy makes a little money through art commissions but not enough to live and has some mental health issues that affect things, but I do too and I’m still trying...

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I just don’t know what to do so Reddit, would I be the a__hole for telling my mother I won’t take care of my sister forever?

The disagreement centers on parental favoritism and transferred responsibility. The mother pushes the younger daughter into lifelong caregiving while funding the older sister’s comforts. Resentment grows from unequal treatment, yet the core issue remains unaddressed adult dependency.

The original poster seeks independence and fairness, shaped by early self-reliance. The sister avoids growth due to enabling. The mother uses manipulation to avoid accountability. Empathy gaps widen as no one discusses mental health support or skill-building openly.

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Family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner stated that “clear boundaries create safety in relationships, while enmeshment breeds resentment” (The Dance of Anger, 1985). This dynamic matches—the parents blur roles, forcing the responsible child into a parental position. Honest talks about expectations could rebuild trust if started early.

Refuse the arrangement politely in writing, listing specific concerns. Encourage the sister to job hunt with small goals, like one application weekly. The parents must fund the home themselves or sell it. Seek individual therapy to process resentment, and relocate if needed to enforce distance.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Social media exploded with advice for the young woman facing family pressure. Users united in urging her to protect her future and reject the caretaker role.

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Most commenters demanded she refuse the entire plan outright, warning of financial traps and lost freedom.

Intelligent_Arm_9241 − Don't move in. Don't pay the bills.NTA.

CityEvening − No no no, they are trying to transfer Amy’s care to you and for you to pay for it. Don’t do this.

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Becalmandkind − YWNBTA. You’re still in their vortex or you wouldn’t even be writing this post. Go live your life. Stop the planning around your grandmother’s house before you get...

You are most likely going to have to leave your town completely for now or they will pull you back. Force your parents to make different plans by not being...

Just say no. No. It may be tempting to get the house to live in but it will cost you your independence. This doesn’t mean you and your sister won’t...

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Obviously your parents have a lot of sway with you which is why you won’t win any discussion with them.

You’re an adult with your own plans and you are NOT required to look after your sister or live where your parents want you to live. “I’m sorry, Mom and...

writierthanyou − NTA, but WDYM you don't know what to do? You do know, so stop equivicating and give a flat no. If she keeps badgering you, cut her off....

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em1977 − Uh, no. Go live your life, don’t enslave yourself to your family’s dysfunction.

Others focused on practical safeguards, like securing ownership or calculating costs before any commitment.

RedditWidow − NTA If they can afford a $10k art studio, a trust for Amy and a van life, they can pay the bills and rates on granny's house and...

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And no, they shouldn't expect you to look after your sister. You have your own life to live. Sounds like it's time to put some distance between you and your...

No-Potential-7242 − NTA. It would be completely reasonable for you to point out that Amy is the favorite, that you resent it, and that you will not take care of...

You need to find out exactly how much you'd have to pay while living at your grandmother's house. And don't simply trust that your parents will pay Amy's share. Get...

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Make sure to see that they are willing to pay for Amy before they leave or I suspect they will leave and stick you with the bill. You need to...

They are going to expect to move into your grandmother's house someday. They're going to spend the money from their own house on their van trip, which will be very...

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At the same time, they're expecting to lean on you to pay for maintaining your grandmother's house. When they return with no money, they may expect you to cover everyone's...

If it will cost you more than renting a room somewhere, rent a room and save money for your own house. You are not responsible for taking care of your...

redditstinkttotal − Only move in if the house is in your name. Then you can evict both Amy and your parents if they try to come back.

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If the house is not in your name, just don’t move there. Find another place to live by yourself, maybe a tiny apartment without space for family. NTA, this whole...

Zorbie − NTA . This isn't your responsibility, your parents are using you as a free caretaker, only in this case you're paying to work for them.

Get out of there as soon as you can, whatever commitment you have to paying the bills, make sure you can leave without that following you, maybe even ask a...

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A few shared strategies for escape, from low contact to faking poverty to deter mooching.

buttered-stairs − NTA. Forget the house. Forget your parents. You will receive nothing from them except bills. Grey stone them about any and all life plans/job info.

If you get along with your sister then text her from time to time, hangout when you’re in town. You need to start paying for ONLY your stuff.

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You will be shocked by how much money you can save when people aren’t able to arbitrarily charge you for anything. Start saving and planning to move out of town.

Distance will make staying out of your parent’s orbit way easier. One of my friends started asking her family for money and acting as though she was very broke.

She kept her apartment undecorated, and to this day doesn’t post anything expensive looking online.

They never gave her anything (despite her having given a lot) but it convinced them that she didn’t have anything for them to mooch off, allowing her to save enough...

She also regularly pretends to have fallen for MLMs or been taken advantage of by partners so that her family thinks she’s a mess and don’t plan to rely on...

PuddlesDown − NTA. They are being completely unreasonable. Time to stand up for yourself and demand your fair share.

wildsouldog − Get out of there asap and rent a studio for yourself only. Amy can either live the van lifestyle too if they love her so much or she...

Literally_Taken − You shouldn’t take care of you’d sister at all. Find a way to leave home for your education.

Constantlyhaveacold − Ugh. NTA. I'm in the same position (but with my brother). I finally had a cone to Jesus talk with my parents. I'm not doing this anymore. &...

Key_Draft4255 − Don’t do it. This is not healthy. Don’t submit to your parents guilt and shaming. Why aren’t you entitled to the same level of care? Refuse to move...

If you are already in it, move out and find your own apartment. Your parents can rent out the house. Not your problem! You need to take care of you...

Do not feel guilty. Do not engage in long drawn out conversations with them. Learn how to Grey Rock. Put yourself first. You deserve this. Invest in therapy. NTA.

Family favoritism teaches hard lessons about self-worth and limits. Stepping away preserves mental health and forces parents to parent. True support builds skills, not dependence.

Would you accept the house if it meant lifelong ties? How soon should parents push adult children toward independence?

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