Man Refuses To Say He Regrets Childhood Choice When Half Siblings Demand It

A grieving boy lost both parents by age 10 and fought alongside his grandparents to stay with them rather than move in with his late father’s widow and her unborn child. He built a stable life there, never viewing the stepmother as family, and later resisted her adult children’s push for a close bond.

Years on, the half-siblings reached out but demanded he confess regret over his childhood choice and admit he would pick differently if possible. He refused, calling their mother no parent to him, which triggered hours of accusations that he was cold and heartless for not honoring her efforts.

A man stands by his choice to live with grandparents after parental loss, refusing to fake regret for half-siblings’ demands.

Man Refuses To Say He Regrets Childhood Choice When Half Siblings Demand It
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for telling my half siblings I will never regret choosing to live with my grandparents over them and their mom?'

I (33m) lost both of my parents by the time I was 10. My mom when I was 5 and my dad when I was 9.

My dad had remarried and had a kid with his wife and they had another on the way when he died.

My grandparents and dad's widow fought for custody of me and because I wanted to be with my grandparents, they won the custody battle.

I didn't spend a lot of time with my half siblings back then and I resisted playing happy families with them and their mom.

She wanted me with them and she felt like I belonged with them but I felt like I belonged with my real family and luckily that's where I was.

For years I had no contact with my half siblings at all.

This all changed three years ago when they reached out and said they wanted to know me and have me in their lives.

We talk once a month and DM a little in between. They want the relationship with me more than I do.

But even more than that, they have expressed on a number of occasions that they feel like the courts made the wrong decision and they feel my choice was wrong.

They keep looking for me to regret the choice. And they have mentioned several times that their mom has longed for a relationship with me and misses me.

A few times they called their mom my mom. I corrected them and would always make it clear I never considered her my mom.

They never understood this and they questioned me on this and I always answered.

Last time we talked they told me they need to hear me say I regret choosing to live with my grandparents over them and their mom.

They said it's something that haunted their family for years. And they need to know if I could go back I'd make a different decision.

I told them that would be a lie and I have never regretted it. I told them being raised by my family was better

than being raised by the woman my dad married. I said I never thought of her as a parent or as my family.

They asked me how I could get to my age and have kids (I have three) and feel that way.

They told me being raised by a parent would have been better than being raised by grandparents. I said if I had a parent then yes, but I didn't.

Both my parents are dead and their mom was never one of mine. Then they had me confirm my lack of regret

and they said I was f__king cold and should have a heart considering their mom fought so hard for me and loved me as her own.

I refused to apologize and they were more than happy to talk at me for hours about how awful I am. Instead of listening I ended the call. AITA?

The half-siblings, influenced by years of their mother’s narrative, pressed the man to voice regret over a custody decision made when he was just a child grieving his parents. He had chosen the stability of his grandparents, resisting any forced “happy family” dynamic with his late father’s widow, whom he never saw as a parental figure.

Their recent outreach came with an emotional price tag: they needed him to say he’d choose differently if he could, claiming it haunted their family. When he honestly affirmed no regret, the conversation turned accusatory, with them labeling him heartless for not acknowledging their mother’s efforts and “love.”

From one angle, the half-siblings’ insistence reads as a deep longing for closure and inclusion. They grew up hearing stories that painted the grandparents’ victory as a loss for their unit, perhaps fueled by their mother’s own unresolved feelings. Wanting a big sibling bond and a retroactive validation makes sense on an emotional level, especially in blended families where loyalty conflicts linger.

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Yet the approach crosses into manipulation territory. Healthy reconnection thrives on mutual respect for individual realities, not forcing one person’s truth to match another’s fantasy.

Broader family dynamics after parental loss highlight how grief ripples outward. Children who lose a parent young often face lasting challenges, with studies showing they are more than twice as likely as non-bereaved peers to experience impairments in school and home functioning, partly tied to depression in the early years.

Custodial grandparents frequently step in during such crises, offering kinship care that research links to greater stability compared to non-relative foster placements, though these arrangements come with their own stresses for all involved.

Psychologist perspectives on such situations underscore the value of honoring a child’s expressed needs during custody decisions. In one analysis of family systems, experts note that forced integrations in step or blended setups can breed resentment when a child already has secure attachments elsewhere.

A relevant insight comes from research on bereavement: “We found that kids who have lost a parent are more than twice as likely than nonbereaved kids to show impairments in functioning at school and at home, even 7 years later.” This comes from a long-term study led by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, emphasizing the persistent impact of early loss and the importance of supportive caregiving environments.

In the Redditor’s case, his grandparents clearly offered that supportive base, allowing him to build a life, without the pressure of performing as part of someone else’s vision. The half-siblings’ push for regret ignores his lived experience and risks turning reconnection into emotional extortion. Neutral advice here points toward clear boundaries: relationships, even sibling ones, shouldn’t require denying your own history.

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Open conversations focused on present-day interests, rather than rewriting the past, could help if both sides are willing. Otherwise, low or no contact protects mental peace, a valid choice when demands feel one-sided.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Some people believe the half-siblings are attempting emotional manipulation and guilt-tripping to force regret and compliance.

Czechuspamer − Last time we talked they told me they need to hear me say I regret choosing to live with my grandparents over them and their mom.

And that would be a moment when I'd cut the contact. This isn't about reconnecting; this is about guilt-tripping you into doing whatever they want.

No one with good intentions would ever say something even remotely close to this.

Because what they tried to do was an extremely destructive type of emotional extortion.

And if they used it once, they will use it more, be sure of that. If, after a month from reconnection, they behave like this, then having a relationship with...

PS - Has their mom spoken to you recently? I mean, if they suddenly reach out, then perhaps she tried as well?

Some people think the stepmother has been feeding the half-siblings a fantasy narrative for years, leading them to seek a unrealistic resolution.

Adelucas − Sounds like their mom has spent the intervening years telling them over and over

that you were coerced and you would have been loved and been part of the family.

Kids lap that stuff up and it sinks deep into their soul. Now they are grown and want their moms fantasy to be true,

and to have it resolved with a group hug like some kind of Hallmark movie.

If it was me I'd have been irritated to the point on blocking the lot of them.

Some people suggest the stepmother’s motivations for wanting custody were financial, involving benefits or assets.

Large-Client-6024 − NTA Call me cynical, but I can't figure why Step Mom would want to raise someone else's kid unless there was money attached.

Did either of OP's parents have an estate, or was Social Security survivor benefits involved? Whoever raised the kid, had control of the assets maybe?

DietCokePeanutButter − Would your stepmother have been in a better financial position if you had stayed?

Either as a result of inheritance or survivor benefits (here in Canada,

children receive a portion of what their parent would have received through their CPP if orphaned), making her more eager to raise you.

I realize that is a really s__tty reason to want to keep a kid, but some people are weirdos.

Some people view the stepmother as having unhealthy obsessions or delusions that influenced her children negatively.

Material_Assumption − NTA - how could they possibly know your life would have been better?

I don't know man, they have an unhealthy obsession over something that can't be undone. Move forward.

No_Cockroach4248 − You made the correct decision. Your grandparents gave you stability and provided a healthy environment for you.

Your dad’s wife needed an emotional support crutch and an extra pair of hands at home.

She spent the intervening years obsessing about you “abandoning” them.

It would hardly have been an healthy environment for you and you would have had to sacrifice your childhood to help her raise her two kids.

Financially, it would also have been advantageous as she would have access to social security/social benefit payments for your mom,

all the social security/social benefit payments for your dad and access to any money left to you in either your mom or your dad’s will

as she would have been your guardian. NTA, I would go no contact with them.

Lazy-Instruction-600 − NTA. Of course they love THEIR MOM. And surely she harped on this for years

about how they had an older sibling that wasn’t with them because of OPs evil grandparents and the stupid courts.

She filled their heads with nonsense. OP must have known this woman for all of what, 3 years before their dad passed?

The one half sibling would have been just a baby and the other wasn’t even born yet!

Stepmom was delusional to think OP saw her as a mother when it was clearly stated they did not.

She has allowed her delusions to make her, now adult, children unhappy. That’s not OPs fault. It’s hers.

OP - If your half-siblings won’t drop it, I would just go back to NC. They aren’t adding anything to your life except insults, demands, and accusations.

Some people affirm that the OP made the right choice and has no obligation to express regret, while criticizing the pressure as manipulative.

[Reddit User] − So they are angry because their fantasy and your reality don't match.

RavenclawEC − NTA, as you said, she is not your parent and there was no reason for you to want to live with them

when you had loving grandparents willing to raise you...

You have a right to your feelings and them to theirs, however, trying to pressure you to express regret on something you obviously don't

it's a bit manipulative and entitled, and it is weird they keep insisting on it.

Hairy-Proof8504 − NTA. I wonder why they NEED to hear you say anything. It's just none of their business.

In the end, this story reminds us how childhood grief and family narratives can clash decades later. Do you think the Redditor’s firm stance was fair given his early loss and stable upbringing with grandparents, or did the half-siblings have a point about healing old wounds?

How would you handle pressure to rewrite your past for someone else’s closure? Share your hot takes below!

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