One woman turned to her sister for comfort after yet another miscarriage. Instead of empathy, she was told her pain was “karma” for a medical abortion she had at 19.
Stunned and furious, she kicked her sister out of her home and cut off contact. Her partner stood firmly behind her, but other family members claimed she overreacted. Was this a rightful boundary against cruelty, or a rash response made in grief?

A Redditor’s Heartbreak Havoc – Here’s The Original Post:


The Background
The Redditor, 32, has been struggling with infertility for seven years. Diagnosed with PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome), she has endured five miscarriages and the rollercoaster of fertility treatments. Each loss has left her physically drained and emotionally raw.
This time, after another devastating miscarriage, she confided in her sister. Instead of sympathy, she got a brutal comment. The sister, 34, told her that her miscarriages were “karma” for the abortion she had as a teenager.
At the time, the abortion was medically necessary, her doctor warned that continuing the pregnancy could have caused life-threatening complications. Her sister even supported that decision back then, but now turned it into a weapon.
The Blowup
Hearing that her grief was somehow deserved punishment was the final straw. The Redditor ordered her sister out of the house. Her partner fully agreed, calling it an act of self-preservation.
But not everyone saw it that way. Some family members said she was “too harsh” and should apologize for reacting emotionally.
The divide was clear: one side insisting her sister’s comment was simply “blunt honesty,” the other recognizing it as deeply cruel and unnecessary.
Why It Cut So Deep
Miscarriage is already an isolating and heartbreaking experience. Research shows that women who suffer pregnancy loss often experience grief comparable to losing a close relative. Telling someone that their loss is punishment dismisses that pain entirely.
It also ignores medical reality. PCOS, which affects up to 13 percent of women worldwide, is a leading cause of infertility and miscarriage.
It has nothing to do with having had an abortion. Suggesting otherwise is not only unscientific, but also shaming.
As grief expert Dr. Alan Wolfelt has said, “Insensitive comments after miscarriage deepen trauma, invalidating a person’s loss.” That is exactly what happened here.
The Sister’s Perspective
It’s possible the sister thought she was offering some form of tough love. She later claimed she wasn’t trying to be mean, just “honest.” But framing infertility as divine punishment is not honesty, it’s judgment.
She also shifted from supporting her sister years ago to using that same decision against her. That contradiction makes it harder to see her comment as anything but a deliberate dig.
Family members defending her may be motivated less by fairness and more by conflict avoidance. It’s easier to label the grieving woman “too sensitive” than to confront the cruelty in their own ranks.
Expert View
Family therapist Joshua Coleman often stresses that boundaries set after betrayal are not spiteful, they are necessary for self-care.
In this case, evicting her sister may have seemed dramatic, but it was a way of saying, “I won’t let you add more pain to my loss.”
Could she have handled it more calmly? Perhaps. Asking her sister to leave “because your words hurt me” might have softened the fallout.
But expecting calm, measured responses in the middle of miscarriage grief is unrealistic. Hormonal changes and raw emotions amplify everything.
The partner’s firm stance, no apology, no contact, also reflects a protective instinct. Couples dealing with infertility often face enormous outside pressure, and having a united front can be vital to emotional survival.
Lessons in Boundaries
This story highlights how fragile family bonds can become under the weight of grief and judgment. When people are vulnerable, careless words carry heavier consequences.
Families often excuse insensitivity as “just being honest,” but honesty without compassion can wound more than it heals.
The Redditor’s decision to cut contact may not be permanent. With time, and only if her sister shows true remorse, reconciliation could happen. But for now, distance protects her from further hurt.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
On Reddit, support was overwhelming. Commenters labeled the sister’s words “cruel,” “heartless,” and “disgusting.”

Many applauded the Redditor for standing up for herself and prioritizing her healing over toxic family drama.


Still, a few voices pointed out that shutting the door completely could fracture family ties for years.

Are these spot-on or just Reddit’s grief-guardian gang?
This clash is about more than one cruel comment. It is about whether grieving people deserve unconditional support or if loved ones are free to inject judgment into their pain. The Redditor chose to draw a hard line, protecting herself and her partner from further harm.
Was it the right call? Many say yes, her home, her grief, her boundaries. Others argue she might have closed the door too quickly.
Either way, it serves as a reminder: when someone is mourning, the kindest words are often the simplest—“I’m sorry, I’m here.” Anything else risks leaving scars that last far longer than the loss itself.









