She Told Her Sister She’s Turning Into Their Parents, And Now Their Relationship May Never Be The Same

Two sisters in their forties sat across from each other, the kind of conversation that starts with casual complaints and suddenly cuts deep. One had spent years watching her older sister repeat the same cold patterns their parents used on them decades ago.

The younger one finally said it out loud: her sister was exactly like their mom and dad, and that was why her own kids kept quiet around her. The words landed hard. Now the older sister calls it the cruelest thing anyone has ever said to her.

She Told Her Sister She's Turning Into Their Parents, and Now Their Relationship May Never Be the Same
Not the actual photo

Was it a necessary wake-up call, or did it cross a painful line?

'AITAH for telling my sister she's exactly like our parents which is why her kids don't tell her anything?'

My older sister (44f) and I (41f) had a rough relationship with our parents until their deaths 23 and 20 years ago.

Our parents were tough on us in all the ways they could be and they never made us feel like we could confide in them.

They'd order us to do it and they'd say we needed to be honest but we got punished for being honest.

To clarify what I mean by that I'll give some non-specific examples. If we were having a hard time in class

and were struggling to keep up and we told our parents about it we would be grounded for not doing well in school,

for not paying attention in school and we would be told we should be doing better and we had zero excuses.

We'd get the help we needed but we were lectured and punished so much it was easier to struggle in silence.

Or if we were having trouble with an adult and we confided in our parents it was automatically jumped on that we better be respectful

and we were grounded for speaking badly about an adult in a position of authority.

Being burnt out wasn't allowed either and asking for a break would get us punished.

Our parents had rules like you must clear your plate and you couldn't ask for more food,

you must ask for permission before getting a drink or a snack and when we got older you must ask for permission before making yourself something to eat.

We had morning and evening chores and we couldn't do them all at once. They had to be done at their designated time.

We didn't get out of them when we were sick either. Curfew was super early and we weren't allowed to pick our own friends entirely.

Our parents often cut off friendships for us because they didn't approve of the family

and it would be something really f__king stupid like they thought the parents were too young or the name they picked was trashy.

My sister and I were relatively close thanks to that upbringing and the fact we lost our parents when we were still pretty young ourselves.

But my sister slowly became more like our parents. She's very strict with her kids (now teens and preteens)

and her and her children's relationship is a perfect mirror of ours and our parents relationship.

While my kids are a bit younger I have always worked on not being the same kind of parent mine were and my relationship with my kids reflects that.

My sister has commented on how open my kids are with me and how much they talk to me in comparison to how little hers talk to her.

It turned into her shitting on me and speaking bitterly about the difference in our relationships with our children every time we spoke.

At one point she accused me of doing no parenting and I told her no, I parent my children but I didn't turn into our parents with my children like...

I told her that's why her kids tell her nothing and it's history repeating itself again.

She feels that was the cruelest thing I could've said to her and maybe it was. But I see so much of our childhood in how she is with her...

Although it might be due to her husband being different and therefore there's less two ganging up on them all the time.

But I know what I said got under my sister's skin and it's still bothering her.. AITAH?

Their parents died years ago, when the sisters were still young adults themselves. Back then, the two women had leaned on each other because childhood had been anything but warm.

Their parents demanded honesty but punished it every time. If the girls struggled in school and admitted it, they got grounded for not trying hard enough.

If they confided about trouble with a teacher or another adult, they were told to show more respect and got punished for speaking badly about authority figures.

Burnout was not allowed. Asking for a break meant lectures and consequences.Simple daily things came with strict rules too. Plates had to be cleared, but you could not ask for seconds.

Snacks and drinks required permission, even as teenagers. Chores followed a rigid schedule. You did not skip them when sick. Curfew was early and non-negotiable.

Friends got cut off for the smallest reasons, like the parents not liking someone’s family name or thinking they were too young to have kids.

See also  Husband Asks For Paternity Test Over Newborn’s Hair Color, Wife Feels Accused Of Infidelity

The message was clear: do not trust us with your real problems. It was safer to stay silent.The sisters survived that together and stayed relatively close after their parents passed.

But over time, the older sister began slipping into the same patterns with her own children, now preteens and teens. She ran a tight ship, strict about rules and respect.

Her kids had become distant, sharing little with her. Meanwhile, the younger sister, with her own slightly younger kids, had made a conscious choice to parent differently.

She worked hard to create a home where her children felt safe talking to her about struggles, mistakes, or tough days. No automatic punishment.

No lectures that made them regret opening up.The difference became obvious. The older sister noticed how openly her nieces and nephews spoke with their mom. Instead of reflecting on her own approach, she grew bitter.

Every conversation turned into criticism. She accused her younger sister of not really parenting at all, of being too soft and letting the kids run wild.

The comments stung, especially coming from someone who knew exactly how painful their own childhood had felt.One day the younger sister had enough.

She looked her sister in the eye and said it plainly. She was not a bad parent. She simply refused to become their parents all over again. That was why her own kids talked to her, and why her sister’s kids told her nothing.

History was repeating itself, just like before.The older sister was devastated. She called it cruel and unnecessary.

See also  Her Family Forced Her Into Marriage To Cure Her, Now She’s Plotting To Disappear

The words clearly got under her skin and have stayed there, bothering her long after the conversation ended.

The younger sister wonders now if she went too far, even though she sees so many echoes of their painful upbringing in how her sister treats her kids.

It is not quite as harsh as what they lived through, partly because her sister’s husband is more balanced, but the pattern is still there.Looking back, the younger sister understands her own motivation.

She did not say it to hurt her sister out of spite. She said it because she remembers how lonely and unsafe it felt to grow up that way.

She broke the cycle with her own children and wants the same for her nieces and nephews.

Watching her sister repeat the mistakes that damaged both of them feels like a loss she cannot stay silent about.

At the same time, she knows blunt truth can wound deeply, especially when it touches on fears of failing as a parent.

This situation highlights how childhood wounds can echo across generations. Many people who grew up in strict, punitive homes either rebel against those methods or unconsciously carry them forward.

The older sister may not even realize how much she mirrors their parents because it feels normal to her. The younger sister’s direct words forced a mirror in front of her, and mirrors like that are rarely comfortable.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Most commenters sided with the younger sister, calling her NTA. Many said the truth hurts but sometimes needs to be heard. 

See also  Mother Halts Teenage Daughter Romance With Much Older Boyfriend

Truebeliever-14 − Sometimes the truth hurts but you need to hear it. NTA

Ok_Professional_4499 − NTA Make sure she knows it’s the truth and not just you lashing out over being hurt.

Mention that she could go talk to a therapist to unpack those behaviors so she could do better for her kids. That it might not be too late.

Maybe even suggest you two go to family counseling together so you can both learn better ways to communicate with each other and your kids? ??

BulbasaurRanch − NTA If it’s true, then that should give her a moment of pause.

She is upset because it’s true and she doesn’t like it. Nobody likes to hear how they’ve failed.

Several pointed out that the older sister had been cruel first by repeatedly attacking her sibling’s parenting and accusing her of doing nothing. 

TheRealRedParadox − It's honest, and she needed to hear it, even if her feelings got hurt.

NTA and honestly you need to double down if she talks to you again, tell her that doesn't make her a bad mother and she can change. But she has...

blacksparrow_r − NTA She needs a wake up call. But some things might be inherited like n__cissism

& it's possible she has no ability for introspection just like your parents. Instead of blaming the kids ask yourself why someone doesn't feel safe to tell you s__t about...

The fact that she said you're a bad parent because you have a relationship with your kids she wishes she had also points to an emotional immaturity that needs a...

I'm sorry but your parents were psychotic. I would've disappeared so fast from those people's lives when I'd turn 18, witness protection would have nothing on me.

BothTreacle7534 − NTA As her kids wont tell her things… you seem to have recognised the similarities good enough to say such things IMHO I hope she‘ll start to work...

A few suggested the older sister should consider therapy to unpack those inherited behaviors before it is too late to rebuild trust with her kids. 

United-Manner20 − NTA congratulations for breaking the cycle

ladyredcyn − Like you, OP. .. I have fought to parent my son in every way opposite of my mother (my father died when I was 6).

People have always marveled at our bond. I celebrate that. ... and now that he's an adult?

I gave a son that is marvelously respectful - and protective - of me, but also. .. everything I had hoped he'd be, just as a human.

You learned the lesson, your sister did not. You are both reaping the benefits of your work. NTA ♥️

Others celebrated the younger sister for breaking the cycle and encouraged her to stay firm.

DynkoFromTheNorth − NTA. As if saying you're not parenting *isn't* cruel or uncalled for.

mifukichan − I mean. .. technically yes, ESH, but also NTA. Occasionally you've got to be the a__hole, I think.

You can't live life without touching the sides. It's so upsetting to hear something like that, but f__k,

I've been set straight by hearing similar things before. If it's under her skin, hopefully that means she's really, truly thinking about it. I hope she isn't just mad.

In the end, family relationships like this are complicated. The younger sister may have delivered a painful truth, but she did it from a place of lived experience and genuine concern. Her sister feels attacked because the observation hit close to home.

Whether those words spark real change or create more distance remains to be seen. Parenting is hard enough without repeating the mistakes that once left you feeling unseen and unsafe.

Was this a necessary dose of honesty that could help her sister and her kids, or was it just one sibling lashing out after years of built-up resentment? What would you have said in her place?

 

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

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

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved