Family and boundaries don’t always mix well, especially when teens feel entitled to things that aren’t theirs. One woman turned to Reddit’s Am I the A**hole? forum after her boyfriend’s younger sister not only stole alcohol from their home but also lashed out when confronted.
When the sister declared that OP “wasn’t family anymore,” the young woman responded by reclaiming her laptop the girl had been using for school. That move sparked even more drama and divided opinions online about whether she’d gone too far.
One woman took back her laptop after her boyfriend’s sister stole alcohol from their home and lied, leading to accusations of being controlling and family fallout












OP edited the post:


OP later provided an update:



This whole mess isn’t just about some stolen Seagrams or a borrowed laptop. It’s really about boundaries who gets to walk into your home, what counts as respect, and how families deal with teenage entitlement.
From OP’s side, the frustration makes sense: she bought the alcohol, she was generous enough to loan out her laptop, and yet she was met with theft, lies, and insults.
Her boyfriend’s sister, only 17, acted like their house was an extension of her own, and when called out, she escalated by declaring OP “wasn’t family.” At that point, OP responded with her own boundary: if she’s not family, then she’s not entitled to family resources, like the laptop.
On the sister’s side, adolescence often magnifies entitlement. Psychologists note that teens sometimes push limits with family members because those spaces feel “safe” for testing autonomy. But stealing alcohol and dragging friends into the house isn’t harmless boundary testing, it’s a legal and safety issue.
Research shows that early, unsupervised access to alcohol increases risky behaviors and dependency later in life (NIH, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism).
The larger family dynamic also can’t be ignored. According to Dr. Joshua Coleman, a psychologist who studies estrangement, parents and siblings often clash when new partners enter the picture because roles get blurred: “When people fail to respect household rules or shared property, the resentment can outweigh any sense of obligation to ‘keep the peace’”.
OP’s move to reclaim her laptop reflects this very dynamic: she chose her peace over enabling chaos.
So, what should OP do?
- Secure the home immediately. It’s concerning that the landlord hasn’t resolved the lock issue. A working lock is the simplest way to prevent future “sister invasions.”
- Shift responsibility back to the father and boyfriend. At 17, the sister is still a minor. Her dad should be handling her access, her behavior, and any restitution for the stolen alcohol.
- Set clear, enforceable boundaries. If she comes into the house uninvited again, there should be consequences from loss of privileges to limiting contact.
Ultimately, OP is not wrong to protect her belongings and sanity. But this isn’t just her battle: it’s also her boyfriend’s responsibility to step in and make sure his sister respects both him and his partner.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Many Reddit users claimed OP was not the jerk and demanded lock changes to block her access


Some commenters questioned her dad’s oversight of a minor stealing alcohol, suggesting library use for schoolwork



While this group urged reimbursement and cutting contact, citing her lies







Some Redditors saw a boyfriend problem if he doesn’t act


This group stressed fixing the door, with the latter suggesting rekeying


In the end, the drama wasn’t really about a 24-pack of Seagrams. It was about a young woman drawing a line and saying, “Respect my home or lose my support.” Many agreed she had every right to take her laptop back and protect her space, while others felt she and her boyfriend need to do more to set boundaries with his family.
So, what do you think? Was reclaiming the laptop the perfect power move, or did it risk escalating the feud too far? And if your partner’s sibling treated your home like their own personal bar, would you still try to keep the peace, or would you lock it down?







