Some families share recipes, hand-me-downs or holiday stress. This one shares… invoices.
A 38-year-old woman and her husband live a stable, child-free life after years of infertility heartbreak.
They work, they save, they take care of their pets, and they’ve made peace with the path life gave them.
Her sister, on the other hand?
Already a single mom of two by twenty-six, then married a man with one child, then had five more kids, then had another baby in December… and is now pregnant again.
Total: eight kids in the house. One more on the way.
Now the sister wants a nanny nd the entire family insists the child-free couple must pay for it. When she refused, the insults turned deeply personal. Cruel, even.
Was she wrong for setting a boundary? Or is her entire family out of line?
Let’s walk through the full story.
The Story Behind The Post






















Reading this, my chest hurt for OP. She already did the hard emotional work. She grieved infertility.
She built a life around stability and pets and partnership. Then her own parents stabbed right into that old wound and used it to guilt her into funding someone else’s choices.
I also felt for the kids, because they never asked to be born into chaos and money stress. But their parents keep choosing more pregnancies while relying on extended family to plug the gaps. That weight landed squarely on the one sibling who worked, saved and did not have children.
This pattern feels less like “family support” and more like “designated walking wallet”. This feeling of being treated as the responsible one who must fix everything fits classic family scapegoat and boundary issues.
At the core, this story holds three threads.
Reproductive grief, financial boundaries and family roles.
First, infertility. Mental health writers describe infertility as a chronic loss experience, with repeated cycles of hope and disappointment that strain identity and relationships.
Verywell Mind notes that infertility already hurts deeply, and extra strain inside close relationships can feel “extremely distressing.”
Psychology Today warns that even “accidentally inappropriate comments” can cut like a knife for people dealing with infertility, especially things like “you have plenty of time” or comparisons to others.
OP’s parents did not stumble into an accidental comment. They weaponized her infertility directly. They called her jealous because “my sister can have beautiful kids and I can’t.” That crosses straight into emotional abuse territory, not just awkward phrasing.
Second, financial boundaries. A nanny is not a one time crisis cost. It is an ongoing household expense. Advice on money and family encourages people to draw clear lines around recurring support, and to align spending with their own life goals, not guilt.
Financial experts often suggest a simple guideline. If helping threatens your own security or your long term plans, then the “help” becomes self sacrifice, not generosity. That especially matters for couples who already face their own losses or health costs.
Here, OP and her husband planned a child free life after a painful journey. They chose to save, pay for their own education and build a safety net. Her sister and brother in law chose to keep expanding their family,
despite already struggling.
Research shows that more people now choose childfree lives or delay children, often because of economic realities. One study found that the percentage of non parents who do not want children nearly doubled, from about 14 percent in 2002 to about 29 percent in 2022.
So OP does not live some bizarre life. She simply sits on a different, very common path, and her money belongs to that path.
Third, the family scapegoat or “responsible one” role. Therapists who study dysfunctional systems describe a pattern where one adult becomes the designated fixer. One article explains that the point of scapegoating
is to “burden the scapegoat with the responsibility and guilt for the family’s woes so that the people who really are responsible don’t have to deal.”
Check out how the community responded:
Most people backed OP hard and called out the cruelty of using infertility as a weapon.





Another group focused on the endless baby train, tossing in dark humor about birth control and vasectomies.





Some commenters zoomed in on the money and boundaries, treating the nanny ask like a subscription they never signed.



This story raises a sharp question about where family support ends and exploitation begins. OP and her husband walked through grief and chose a different life. They saved, built stability and poured their love into each other and their pets.
Her sister chose a big, ongoing family. Her parents chose to protect that pattern by shaming the one person who refuses to bankroll it. Saying no here does not equal coldness. It reflects clarity. You cannot heal your own heartbreak and then fund everyone else’s choices on top of it.
Healthy love respects limits. It does not drag your deepest pain into an argument to get a babysitter.
So what about you? If you had a sibling with nine kids asking you to pay for a nanny, would you help anyway, or would you draw the same line?









