AITA for still not letting my sister into my house after she made me miss daughter’s birth?
In a heart-wrenching moment of familial tension, a man finds himself torn between two worlds—the fragile bond of a sister meeting her estranged father for the first time in nearly two decades, and the urgent call of his wife going into labor. As he navigates this emotional minefield, a simple act of support turns into a painful clash of priorities and misunderstandings.
Caught in the crossfire of love and duty, he grapples with feelings of betrayal and helplessness, his phone silenced by a sister’s fear and anxiety. The silence that once held hope now echoes with missed calls and shattered trust, leaving him to question whether he is the villain or the victim in this delicate family drama.









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As renowned relationship therapist Dr. John Gottman explains, “Unresolved conflict escalates when partners fail to repair after a rupture. Repair attempts must be recognized and accepted for healing to occur.” While this situation involves a sibling dynamic, the principle of repairing a significant rupture applies; the sister made a repair attempt by apologizing, but the poster has not yet accepted it, leading to prolonged distress. The core of this conflict centers on boundary violation and emotional prioritization. The sister deliberately shut off the poster's access to critical, time-sensitive information (wife in labor) to secure her own emotional support for meeting her father. This action represents a severe misjudgment of emotional labor and context, prioritizing her anxiety over a potentially life-altering event for her brother. The poster's reaction—missing the birth of his first child—is a major trauma, and his current anger and need for space are understandable reactions to this loss of control and presence during a critical moment. From a professional standpoint, while the poster's initial reaction of anger was appropriate given the circumstances, maintaining the exclusion weeks later risks escalating the situation into chronic resentment. The sister's anxiety was the motivation, but her method was destructive. A constructive approach would involve setting a clear, time-bound boundary (e.g., 'I need three more weeks of space') while communicating *what* is needed for repair, rather than simply punishing. Future interactions should focus on establishing clear communication protocols for high-stakes events.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.:
When users weighed in, they held nothing back. It’s a raw, honest look at what people really think.













The original poster is deeply conflicted, grappling with intense anger and the devastation of missing his first child's birth due to his sister's actions. His current stance is one of absolute exclusion, refusing contact and barring her from his home, which directly conflicts with his family's expectation that he should forgive her quickly and restore normal relations.
Is the poster justified in maintaining a severe exclusion of his sister weeks after the event to process his profound sense of loss, or does his refusal to allow reconciliation constitute an excessive and unfair punishment that damages broader family unity?