Uncle Refuses To Force Traumatized Niece To Visit Her Dying Father In Hospital

A guardian took in his struggling 13-year-old niece after her father moved away for work and imposed a harsh set of demands on her daily life. Strict early-morning workouts, a severely limited diet that left her malnourished, constant chores plus paid labor, and near-total isolation from friends drained the young girl until her relatives stepped in, sought professional help, and watched her slowly begin to heal in a calmer home with therapy and new connections.

When a serious car accident left the father fighting for his life and extended family urged a hospital visit, the girl shut down completely at the mere suggestion. The uncle and his wife chose not to push her, prioritizing the fragile progress she had made over pressure from relatives who believed the dying man deserved a final chance to see his child.

A guardian uncle chose not to force his traumatized niece to visit her dying father after years of strict control.

Uncle Refuses To Force Traumatized Niece To Visit Her Dying Father In Hospital
Not the actual photo.

'AITA For Not Making My Niece See Her Dad After He Was In A Car Accident?'

My 13 year old niece has lived with me, my wife, our daughter (12), and our son (15) for 7 months.

Her dad's work had him move out of state for a year and he thought it would be better for her if she stayed with us.

My brother and niece lived 45 minutes away from us but until we took her in, he rarely visited (maybe once a year), didn't allow us to visit,

and rarely let her talk to us when we talked on the phone. He was also very strict with her when they'd visit but it didn't seem too crazy.

When she moved in with us, my brother emailed me her routine and a list of rules for her to follow.

He expected my niece to wake up at 5am every day so she could work out for an hour and a half before getting ready for school.

Workouts were 3 hours (1.5 hours 2x a day) on weekends/school breaks.

He had her on a very strict diet (no dairy, no sugar, no red meat, very limited carbs, almost no fat, etc.),

no more than 1200 calories a day under any circumstances, no internet access except for school, no friends over under any circumstances,

she was expected to take care of all of the house chores, and she was expected to work 4 hours a day after school and 6 hours on weekends 7...

(his friend owns a convenience store and let her work there) so she could pay for her own food and clothes and her share of the utilities.

After reading all of this we contacted CPS and took her to the doctor. She is very malnourished and her dad was supposed to go to therapy and parenting classes.

My niece is doing great now. We put her in private school because she has anxiety and the smaller class sizes helped her get through the day better.

She's made a couple friends and she's slowly starting to gain weight (still afraid of fat and sugar but we're getting there).

She's in 2 different therapies and her doctors seem great.

Around 6 weeks ago her dad was in a car crash. Some family members called and told us to visit with my niece because it was pretty bad.

We talked to my niece about visiting her dad with me and she completely shut down.

I decided not to make her visit and he eventually passed away without seeing his daughter.

Now I have family members saying no matter how bad of a dad he was he still deserved to see his kid before he died.

AITA for not making my niece see him?

The core issue centered on a child’s clear trauma response versus family expectations that a parent “deserves” a final goodbye no matter the history.

The uncle and his wife prioritized their niece’s mental health after witnessing the effects of extreme control, strict routines, and nutritional deprivation that had left her anxious and underweight. Forcing contact risked undoing months of progress in a vulnerable 13-year-old already in therapy.

Opposing views from some relatives framed it as denying a dying man his daughter, emphasizing blood ties and final chances. Yet many community voices pushed back, arguing that a child’s well-being must outweigh an adult’s wishes, particularly when the relationship involved what appeared to be emotional and physical neglect.

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The niece’s shutdown reflected real fear and past harm, and overriding her consent could have caused fresh trauma. This isn’t about punishing the past but protecting the living child’s recovery.

Broadening out, family dynamics like these highlight how childhood maltreatment, including emotional abuse and neglect, creates lasting scars. According to the World Health Organization, child maltreatment leads to severe short- and long-term consequences, including anxiety, depression, and impaired lifelong physical and mental health.

A 2014 American Psychological Association (APA) study found that children who experience emotional abuse and neglect face similar or worse mental health problems such as anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, and PTSD symptoms compared to those who suffer physical or sexual abuse.

“Children who are emotionally abused and neglected face similar and sometimes worse mental health problems as children who are physically or sexually abused,” as noted by APA. This aligns closely with the niece’s situation, where restrictive control and isolation likely deepened her anxiety, making any forced reunion potentially harmful rather than healing.

In terms of solutions, experts stress that decisions involving estranged or abusive parents should center the child’s voice and safety, especially for teens old enough to express strong preferences.

Neutral steps start with continued therapy, open family communication without pressure, and professional mediation if needed. Healing isn’t linear, but supportive environments like the one this uncle provided can make a real difference.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Some users strongly affirm the OP as NTA for prioritizing the niece’s mental health and well-being over the abusive father’s dying wish.

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extinct_diplodocus − NTA. Turn it the other way. Niece had the right to not be forced to visit the abusive dad.

Not traumatizing the living niece easily outweighs letting the dad see the child he was abusing.

Red_girl15 − NTA. Your niece’s well-being comes first, and her reaction to seeing her dad shows how traumatized she is.

Forcing her to visit could have caused more harm. You made the right call prioritizing her mental health.

Your family might not understand, but you did what was best for her.

Acrobatic_Increase69 − NTA you’ve done more for her in 7 months than any other family ever did.

If his family saw her often then would be able to see what he did with her but didn’t help her. She’s a child not a slave. Why did they...

To make him feel better, to get forgiveness? That’s earned and not forced. 1000% you’re amazing! !

Aggressive_Earth_322 − NTA, she is old enough to make her own choices.

Her comfort and wants as the victim come before anything her abuser wanted even on their death bed.

Meggz996 − NTA… if SHE didn’t even wish to visit her own father under those circumstances, then I personally wouldn’t have forced her to do so either!

The whole situation was devastating for me just to even read, as I have a daughter the same age & all I can say is THANK GOD she entered into...

I truly believe had she never had the opportunity to do so, her life would’ve been extremely unstable, miserable

& probably caused even further emotional, mental, physical harm to her than what was already done by her father.

She will probably carry the scars from the damage her father inflicted forever (to some extent)

but you opening your heart & home and showing her what a loving family/home environment SHOULD BE, will hopefully help her to overcome that

& grow into a more stable, confident young woman over the rest of her teens/young adult years!

Praying for you & your family & may God bless you for taking her into your family & nurturing her with the love & respect from a father figure that...

Other people emphasize that the niece’s trauma and the father’s abusive behavior make forcing the visit completely wrong.

SoIFeltDizzy − NTA Perhaps let the relatives know that unfortunately she was not well enough to travel at that time even had you wanted her to.

The truth without discussing her private business.

RaineMist − NTA He was strict with her to the point of being malnourished.

Any process made would've set her back to where she first began if he saw her.

[Reddit User] − NTA. And apologies, know he was your brother. ..but thank f__k the trash got taken out.

JakiCollins − NTA. Idk, but to me it seems like this dude was raising her to nothing more than an object.

Restrictive diet suggests he wants her body perfect, the chores suggests "women's work" or wifely duties,

and no social life suggests to support network when she does grow up and marry.

There's a good chance I'm over thinking this whole thing, but no matter the reasoning, you did right by that child.

Sorry for your loss, but she is better off for it.

OkDragonfly4098 − The convenience store owner is some kind of weirdo if he was ok with this.

Do you think the uncle’s decision to respect his niece’s shutdown was the right call given her healing journey, or should family pressure have played a bigger role? How would you balance loyalty to blood relatives with a child’s clear emotional needs in such a heavy situation? Share your thoughts below!

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