This Man Refused To Take In His Sister’s Four Kids While She Was In The Hospital, And Now The Family Is Divided

When a family emergency hits, people often assume everything else should pause. Work, space, comfort, and logistics suddenly get pushed aside in the name of “family helps family.”

But for one 29-year-old man, that expectation collided hard with reality.

With a small apartment, two young children of his own, and a full-time job, he was asked to take in his sister’s four children while she went to the hospital to give birth to her fifth baby.

He said no.

And now, his decision has turned into a family argument about responsibility, obligation, and what support actually looks like.

This Man Refused to Take in His Sister’s Four Kids While She Was in the Hospital, and Now the Family Is Divided
Not the actual photo

Here’s what happened.

'AITA for not wanting to take in my sisters 4 kids while she’s in the hospital?'

I29M have a two bedroom apartment. My wife and I have 2 kids (5&7) who already share a bedroom.

My sister and I are the only relatives that live close to each other. Our parents live about an hour and a half away.

My sister is currently pregnant with her 5th child, and had asked me about taking her kids when she goes to deliver, and then for the next day as well.

Her kids are 12, 10, 8 and 2. I told her I really didn’t think that would work out space wise, and I work weekdays so it’d be a lot...

She told me take the days off, or just let them squish together that it’d be fine. I told her no, I really didn’t see how it would work out.

She was upset and said she was getting stressed out because she really needed reliable care.

I asked her what about her sitter (because she does have a sitter) and she said she really didn’t want to have to pay for it, and she wanted a...

I told her I was sorry, but no. She argued with me a little bit; which was more her trying to persuade me, then when she saw she couldn’t she...

It’s been 2 days, and she hasn’t reached out. We typically talk daily. AITA

Add: we cannot go to her house because the second day I was referring too, is she wants alone time at home with her husband and the baby.

A request that quickly became overwhelming

The man explained that he lives in a two-bedroom apartment with his wife and their two children, ages five and seven. The kids already share a room, meaning space is already tight under normal circumstances.

His sister, meanwhile, is pregnant with her fifth child and has four children already: ages 12, 10, 8, and 2.

Before her delivery, she asked if he could take all four kids for a couple of days while she is in the hospital and also wanted a day afterward for recovery and time with her husband and newborn.

At first, he tried to explain the logistical issue. There simply wasn’t enough space. His wife would be home alone with six children while he was at work. The situation, in his view, wasn’t just inconvenient, it was unmanageable.

His sister’s response was to suggest solutions like taking time off work or “just having them all sleep together.”

He declined.

See also  Man Is Outraged After His Girlfriend Compares His Lack Of Size To Her Average Build

That refusal triggered frustration. She told him she was stressed and needed reliable childcare. When he asked about other options, she admitted she had a paid sitter but didn’t want to use or pay for her. She also wanted uninterrupted time with her husband after birth.

From his perspective, that’s when the expectation shifted from “help if you can” to “you must make this work.”

Why this situation escalated so quickly

On the surface, this looks like a simple disagreement about babysitting.

But underneath, it is really about capacity versus expectation.

He is a parent with limited space and a full-time job. She is a parent in a vulnerable medical situation asking for short-term support for a large number of children.

Family systems research consistently shows that when one household assumes another has unlimited flexibility, conflict is likely to emerge, especially when childcare is involved.

The hidden tension: “family helps family” vs practical limits

The emotional core of the conflict is not just childcare. It is the expectation of obligation.

The sister framed the situation as a matter of family duty, especially in a medical context where she would be in the hospital.

However, she also had other options available, including a paid sitter and extended family only about 1.5 hours away. The issue, according to the man, was that she preferred not to pay for care and wanted a more convenient arrangement.

This is where many similar conflicts become strained. When help is framed as moral obligation rather than voluntary support, refusal can feel like betrayal rather than boundary-setting.

But from the other side, agreeing to care for six children in a small apartment for multiple days is not a small favor, it is a major responsibility.

See also  Man Buys Dream House With New Partner, Ex Says He Stole Her Life

What child and family experts generally point out

Childcare professionals and family therapists often emphasize that support during childbirth should be planned, not improvised, especially when multiple children are involved.

Hospitals and maternal care guidelines also encourage families to build layered support systems ahead of delivery, rather than relying on a single backup option.

This is especially important when children have varying ages and needs, including toddlers who require constant supervision.

In practice, most experts recommend distributing care responsibilities across multiple adults or formal childcare arrangements to avoid overburdening one household.

Why people empathize with both sides

Situations like this tend to divide opinion because both perspectives contain valid emotional truth:

  • The sister is facing a physically demanding medical event and wants her children cared for by someone she trusts
  • The brother is already managing a full household and does not have the space or capacity to absorb four additional children

Conflicts like this often arise when emotional urgency collides with logistical limits.

And neither side can fully solve the other’s constraints.

Check out how the community responded:

Most commenters agreed he was not wrong for refusing. Many pointed out that taking in four additional children, especially in a small apartment while working full-time, is not a reasonable expectation.

FacetiousTomato − NTA At the risk of massive downvotes, part of the risk you run when you have 5 kids, is that managing all the kids is a tremendous challenge.

Asking someone to watch your four children, is a massive ask. Asking them to do it overnight, when they've got their own kids, and no space, is inconsiderate.

Parents can come to town, stay at her place, and watch their kids. (Or maybe there is a reason this doesn't work, but you're still not an a__hole for saying...

AKlife420 − NTA, why can't mom and dad drive the 1.5 hours to come watch the kids? Or she can pay the sitter. You said No and that is a...

and she wanted a day with her husband and her and the baby. That kind of goes out the window when you have 4 other kids you have to take...

lizeken − Am I the only one who doesn’t think an hour and a half is that far? If the parents lived multiple states over or across the country then...

Having the parents stay at the sister’s house or taking the kids to the parents’ house seems way more logical

A common sentiment was that while family support is important, it cannot override physical limits or automatically replace paid childcare options.

DrTeethPhD − NTA If you're having trouble arranging care for your four kids, don't have a fifth.

pseudopod_ink − NTA. You're not her only option, just the free one.

Triplethreat2870 − Why are people calling OP the AH? He would need to take off work to watch 4 extra kids and cram them all into a 2 bedroom.

Family helps family when they are able to but she can also pay a sitter, she quite simply doesn’t want to. Instead she’d rather OP take days off work so...

Several users also noted that the sister still had alternatives available, including her sitter and other relatives within driving distance, which made the “no other option” framing less accurate.

See also  Mom Laughs At Elephant Emoji Joke About Ex, Reddit Says It Went Too Far

Discount_Mithral − NTA. Your parents can make the trip out to help, she also has a husband who can take time off work.

This isn't a "you" problem. When you decide to have 5 kids, your "time alone" really just drops to zero.

JCannaday3 − They have had MONTHS to prepare for this and a conversation should have occurred long ago.

The imposition of 4 extra children is over the top and an unfair ask. You should feel no obligation.

The_Bastard_Henry − NTA, if she didn't want to be in this situation, she shouldn't have had so many kids.

crackerfactorywheel − NTA. Your parents are only 1 1/2 hours away and could take them. Or heck, the husband’s family could take them.

Family obligations matter, but so do space, time, and the well-being of the household being asked to help.

Sometimes the most responsible answer is not the most emotionally satisfying one.

And in this case, the real conflict is not whether he cares about his sister.

It is whether saying “no” to an overwhelming request can coexist with still being a supportive family member.

 

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved