She Refuses To Attend Family Gatherings With Her Husband’s Toxic Sisters And Says She Doesn’t Care About Their Kids

Family is supposed to be the place where you feel safe, accepted, and respected.

But for one 41-year-old woman, her husband’s extended family has become the exact opposite of that.

After years of conflict, rumors, and what she describes as toxic behavior from her husband’s two sisters, she made a decision: she would no longer attend family gatherings where they were present.

What sparked debate online wasn’t just her refusal to go.

It was her blunt honesty about something more emotionally loaded.

She said she doesn’t care about her nieces and nephews either.

And that’s where things got complicated.

She Refuses to Attend Family Gatherings With Her Husband’s Toxic Sisters and Says She Doesn’t Care About Their Kids
Not the actual photo

Here’s how she explained it.

'AITA for not caring about my nieces or nephews?'

Ugh god!I (41F) have been together with my husband (41M) for ten years. We have a young daughter together.

Husband has 2 sisters that I am no contact with. Both sisters have horribly toxic behavior.

Several years ago, middle sister Lily (38F) started spreading rumours about me in the family, tried to manipulate my husband to leave me, and insinuated

that I'm a gold digger stealing my husband's family's money (b__ch I put myself through university and worked 4 jobs during my Masters,

I would never ask ANYONE to support me). Youngest sister Patty (36F) is the definition of high school bully mean girl.

Nothing is ever good enough for her, she is always the victim and never wrong, she constantly tries to one-up everyone in every situation, she lacks empathy and is just...

For these reasons and many more I'm no contact. I'm too old for this s__t and life is too short.

Here's where I maybe the a__hole. Every summer period there are several family dinners and BBQs together. If the sisters are there I will not attend.

My husband gets frustrated with me because "it's an opportunity to spend time with the kids." Lily has 2 boys and Patty has 2 girls.

I do not have any problems with my husband taking our daughter to see his family. He is free to do as he pleases.

But I told him I do not want to spend time with his sisters and I don't care about their kids.

The kids have always been an excuse to overlook their horrible behavior and I'm done pretending to play "happy family" with them.

Obviously, I don't want anything bad to happen to their kids and those kids are innocent people that deserve happiness, but they're not my problem or obligation to see.

I don't even know the children, I'm not contact with the sisters and have no interest in faking nice so that the family can have a few "good" photos together..

Ugh. I'd rather sit at home by myself and protect my peace.. AITA?

Years of conflict that changed everything

The woman has been with her husband for 10 years, and they share a young daughter together. On the surface, it is a stable family life.

But her relationship with her husband’s two sisters has been fractured for years.

She describes the older sister as someone who spread rumors about her, tried to interfere in her marriage, and accused her of being a gold digger. The younger sister, she says, is a constant source of conflict, someone who thrives on drama, competition, and emotional manipulation.

After repeated incidents, she went no contact with both of them.

And she reached a point where she stopped trying to “play nice” for the sake of appearances.

So when summer family dinners and BBQs come around, she simply does not attend if the sisters are there.

Her husband, however, is frustrated. He sees these gatherings as opportunities for family connection, especially for their daughter to spend time with cousins.

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That tension eventually led to the question at the center of the conflict.

The line she drew about the children

The woman made it clear she has no issue with her husband taking their daughter to family events. She supports that completely.

But she refuses to attend herself.

And more controversially, she said she does not care about her husband’s sisters’ children. Not out of malice, but out of emotional distance and boundary setting.

In her words, the children are often used as a reason to justify staying connected to people she considers harmful. She is not interested in maintaining that system or pretending to be part of a “happy family” dynamic for the sake of photos or appearances.

She emphasized that she does not wish harm on the children. She simply does not feel any obligation or emotional investment in relationships she has never built.

For her, it comes down to one principle: protecting her peace.

Why family conflict like this escalates

Family systems research shows that conflict between in-laws is one of the most persistent sources of marital tension, especially when boundaries are unclear or repeatedly tested.

Psychologists often note that when one partner has ongoing conflict with extended family, the other partner can feel caught between loyalty to their spouse and loyalty to their family of origin.

Over time, this can turn neutral events like BBQs into symbolic battlegrounds for belonging and acceptance.

What psychology says about emotional disengagement

Clinical psychologists distinguish between detachment from harmful behavior and emotional coldness toward unrelated individuals.

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In this case, the woman is not expressing hatred toward the children. Instead, she is expressing emotional non-involvement, which is a common outcome in long-term family estrangement scenarios.

Dr. Joshua Coleman, a psychologist who studies family estrangement, has noted that cutting off extended family is often not impulsive, but the result of repeated unresolved harm and lack of repair over time.

While estrangement is painful, he emphasizes that it often occurs when one party feels that continued contact requires ongoing emotional self-sacrifice.

This aligns with her framing: she is not trying to punish anyone, she is trying to avoid re-entering a dynamic she experienced as toxic.

The emotional fault line in the relationship

What makes this situation difficult is not just the in-laws.

It is the mismatch between values inside the marriage.

One partner is prioritizing family continuity and inclusion, especially for the sake of the children.

The other is prioritizing emotional safety and boundary enforcement after years of conflict.

Both perspectives are emotionally valid, but they naturally clash when they require the same physical presence at the same events.

This is where many couples end up negotiating not whether contact happens, but who participates in it and at what emotional cost.

See what others had to share with OP:

Most commenters agreed she was not obligated to maintain relationships with people who had repeatedly mistreated her.

n2oc10h12c8h10n402 − NTA. whoever says ESH or YTA has not experienced having _bad_ relatives.

espressothenwine − NTA. You don't have to sit around with his toxic sisters if you don't want to. It's really as simple as that.

You don't have to care about his sister's kids either, you wish them no ill will but you aren't interested in their lives which is perfectly fine. Your husband is...

idisturballtheshit − NTA. I don't like my FIL. At all. The feeling is mutual.

When we're in his area and hubby wants to visit, I usually have a "headache" or "upset stomach" and hubby gets to visit by himself.

You don't have to see or care about them. You're not wishing them ill or harm.

Many supported her decision to skip gatherings while still allowing her husband and daughter to attend.

Katerh − Why do you have be at these things? Husband can bring your daughter, he can see his sisters, she can see her cousins, you don’t have to see...

Lazuli_Rose − NTA. Same here. Got a brother and a SIL who I do not associate with.

I hope their kids are doing well and they have happy lives but I don't need to be around them.

Goldielocks1972 − NTA I had a very similar situation with my ex-MIL and did exactly as you do.

My husband was more than welcome to take our son and go, I stayed home and enjoyed the quiet time.

As far as the rest of the family I totally got along with them and spent lots of time with them, just not at my inlaws house.

Some users, however, pointed out a potential long-term complication: her daughter may eventually want a closer relationship with cousins, which could create future tension if not handled carefully by both parents.

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MotelTheTailor1903 − NTA. Personally, I think the significance of the "nieces and nephews" relationship is overrated,

and the same applies to "cousins. " I don't think it's that close of a blood tie, and it's even less so through marriage.

If the individuals are desirable people with whom to associate, swell, but it's not such an irreplaceable loss if not.

Some families are far too codependent socially, with their social lives revolving to a detrimental extent around extended family members.

CosmicContessa − NTA. It’s always fair to preserve your peace in the face of bullies; family or otherwise.

That_Bee_Baker − NTA. You're not keeping your husband or daughter from going and connecting with family. I do think it might be tricky down the line, if your daughter wants...

pseudopod_ink − NTA. Husband needs to respect the boundary and realize if he wants to people please these assholes that is on him.

For some people, family gatherings are connection and warmth.

For others, they are reminders of conflict they have no desire to relive.

The real question here is not whether she is wrong for staying away.

It is how couples navigate extended family conflict without turning boundaries into battles.

 

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