Youngest Sibling Rejects Plea From Father’s Former Affair Partner For Caregiving Help

A group of siblings in their twenties saw their childhood world fracture when their father’s workplace romance burst into the open right in front of them. Their mother’s heart broke, the family moved on, and the new partner eagerly took on a stepmother role only to later demand the children be removed when they refused to accept her or forget the past.

More than ten years later the same partner reached out because the father had become seriously ill and disabled while she cared for their four young children under seven. She asked the original siblings for support, believing the youngest once held hope for a better relationship. Instead the youngest sibling delivered a clear refusal, stating the partner had chosen the marriage and must now handle the responsibilities alone.

A Redditor declined to help care for their estranged, ill father at the request of his former affair partner.

Youngest Sibling Rejects Plea From Father's Former Affair Partner For Caregiving Help
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for telling my father's affair partner that she married him and she can take care of him now that he can no longer take care of himself?'

My father was not a very warm and caring father when my siblings and I (all in our 20s now) were young.

I'm the youngest and I was only 8 when we all found out he was having an affair with a woman he worked with.

The affair only came out because the affair partner grew tired of our father staying married to mom and showed no signs of being willing to divorce mom for her.

So she took measures into her own hands and confronted mom with the truth. My siblings and I were all home at the time.

It blindsided my mom significantly because, while she knew our father worked a lot,

he had always been attentive as a spouse to her and he could play pretend that he was invested in his kids.

My mom's marriage to him fell apart and she moved out of his house with us and we started anew. My father fought for shared custody.

I often wonder if this was to punish her or us or something because it's not like he had any role in our lives at all. But he was awarded...

His affair partner threw herself into this role of "stepmom" and she acted like she was some new person who had no bad history with us/our family.

She even ignored the fact she destroyed our mom's heart right in front of us.

We did not like her and within two years she told our father she no longer wanted us around anymore

because "all we did was bully her and make her feel like she was some unimportant mistake he made"

and she was also bothered by the fact none of us would acknowledge her as our father's wife or our stepmom.

When asked we would always say she was our father's affair partner. This wasn't something she wanted following her around or thrown in her face a lot.

So we had no contact with our father for more than a decade. I'm 22 now.

Recently the affair partner made contact to inform us that our father had suffered several health complications and he is now ill and disabled.

My oldest brother confirmed this is true and is aware of which hospital he's currently in.

None of us had any interest in seeing him and we expressed this, though not to her, to our father's sister.

His affair partner decided my siblings would never give in but she knew a much younger me had a hope for a better relationship with my dad

and she tried to say she couldn't care for him and the four young children they have under the age of 7 and that "my family needs me".

I told her clearly that they were not my family and that she married him so she was responsible for caring for him now that he cannot care for himself

and I told her I would not help and did not care how tough it was for them.

Her response was full of anger but she in not so many words called me an a__hole.

I ignored her but she again insulted me and claimed that I was sick and cruel for my stance. AITA?

Here, the core issue boils down to boundaries forged in childhood pain. The Redditor, now 22 and the youngest of the siblings, recalls a father who was distant even before the affair came to light, a mother devastated by the public confrontation, and an affair partner who aggressively embraced a stepmom role, only to later demand the children be removed from the picture because they wouldn’t play along or stop referencing her past actions.

From one angle, the partner’s plea makes emotional sense on the surface: she’s overwhelmed caring for a disabled husband and young children, and she remembers the youngest once holding out hope for a better father-child bond. Yet the siblings see it differently. They view the request as conveniently ignoring the history: the affair that upended their family, the decade-plus of no contact, and the partner’s own role in severing ties when the kids didn’t warm up.

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This situation spotlights broader family dynamics around estrangement and loyalty after infidelity. Research shows parental affairs can leave lasting marks. According to a study exploring relational ethics in adult children of infidelity, 40% of participants in one sample knew of at least one parental affair during their teenage years, often leading to emotional fragmentation, trust difficulties, and challenges in their own relationships. Another analysis found that children exposed to parental infidelity scored lower on measures of relational ethics with family and romantic partners.

Dr. Ana Nogales, a psychologist who has studied the topic extensively, noted in her work on the subject: “Seventy-five percent of those who responded to our ‘Parents Who Cheat’ survey reported that they felt betrayed by the parent who cheated.” She further highlighted how such experiences shape attitudes toward love and trust.

The Redditor and siblings aren’t acting out of nowhere; they’re protecting emotional space built after years of feeling sidelined and betrayed by the very adults who were supposed to prioritize stability.

On the caregiver side, the partner’s burden is real and heavy. Studies on spousal caregivers consistently show high levels of strain, with one analysis of spouses caring for partners with significant disabilities reporting mean burden scores around 73.5 on standardized scales, influenced strongly by the level of disability. Spouses often face physical, emotional, and financial pressures, especially when also raising young children.

Yet experts emphasize that adult children have no legal or automatic obligation to step into caregiving roles for estranged parents, particularly when past actions contributed to the rift.

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Neutral paths forward might include the partner exploring professional support services, community resources for disabled adults and families, or counseling to process the shared history without demanding reconciliation on her timeline. For the siblings, maintaining clear boundaries while reflecting on any lingering curiosity about half-siblings could allow space for personal healing without reopening old wounds.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most people believe the affair partner and father are reaping the consequences of their past actions and the OP owes them nothing.

hydrangeafrog − NTA, your dad made the choice to be s__tty to your family & his affair partner chose to marry him.

There's that whole "in sickness and in health" marriage thing she seems to have forgotten about.

[Reddit User] − NTA this is Karma in action, she is reaping what she sowed. She destroyed your Mother and your family.

You owe her nothing. There are 2 AH's in your tale, your father and his affair partner

Overall-Scholar-4676 − NTA. She wanted your dad. She took your dad. She didn’t want his kids around and he obliged.

You nor your siblings had any say in your relationship with your dad. She wanted him and now that things are hard she wants his kids back in his life.

Bad decisions have consequences, she’s now getting hers.

[Reddit User] − NTA She wanted him all to herself and now she has him. All. To. Herself.

wewillfuckyouup − Nta play stupid games win stupid prizes, she picked him, made him chose her and now when it's bad she needs help.

No she did this. Hope your mom is happier, and living her best life

Bitter-Berry482 − NTA 1000% Play stupid games, win stupid prizes. She broke up a family now she gets to feel what it's like to work her a__ off to keep...

mcmimi83 − NTA She got exactly what she asked for. She destroyed your mother by confronting her with the truth IN FRONT OF HER CHILDREN.

She attempted to put herself into a role none of you were willing to offer in the first place.

And then ordered your sperm donor to send you all away when it didn’t work out.

She made sure your father didn’t have anything to do with you all for over 10 years.

She paved this road to hell with her own s__tty life choices. Let her walk it alone.

jancusa2000 − Don’t engage with her, block her and forget. Funny how tables turned and suddenly you should step in.

It’s her husband so let her deal with it. Not a big price for destroyed family they caused.

[Reddit User] − You are not the A hole! Life has consequences, and it's her problem to deal with those consequences.

Having grown up in a family broken apart by infidelity and then marriage to the cheating partner,

I am consistently amazed at the mentality of we did what felt best for us but now we are due your complete love, acceptance and support.

She dug the holes she now finds herself in, don't help dig her out.

A user emphasizes that the affair partner wanted the father exclusively and now must handle the consequences alone.

No-Yam-1231 − NTA. F__k those people. She made the choice to upend your lives,

and then cut you out instead of putting in the work needed to repair the damage she had caused.

Again, f__k those people, let them lie in the bed they made.

Do you have any relationship with your half siblings? Be there for them if you want, but you owe them nothing.

In the end, this story leaves us reflecting on how past choices ripple into the present. The Redditor stood firm on not being pulled back into a family dynamic that once caused deep hurt, prioritizing their own peace after years of distance.

Do you think drawing that line was fair given the lifelong stakes and history, or should adult children sometimes extend grace regardless? How would you handle being asked to help care for someone who chose a path that fractured the original family? Share your hot takes below!

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