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Brother Raised Sister Since She Was 8, But Now His Girlfriend Wants Her Gone

by Marry Anna
November 23, 2025
in Social Issues

Every child deserves a parent, but not every parent deserves a child.

For one 15-year-old girl, family has been a game of hot potato she never asked to play. After being abandoned by both parents and raised by her older brother since she was eight, she recently stumbled upon a secret plan: her brother’s new girlfriend wants to “start a family”, and that vision doesn’t include a teenager.

Now, she is facing a sudden move to a foreign country and a mother she hasn’t seen in seven years.

Read the full story:

Brother Raised Sister Since She Was 8, But Now His Girlfriend Wants Her Gone
Not the actual photo

AITA for yelling at my brother’s girlfriend because she is trying to get rid of me?

As the title says, i (15f) think my brothers girlfriend (Julie, 24f) is trying to get rid of me. i live with my brother because after my parents divorced

none of them wanted me so my brother took me (he was 18 i was 8). We lived alone together until a year ago, he got a girlfriend.

She doesn’t live with us but she is at our apartment a lot. I don’t really like her but i already know he kind of has some resentment toward me

because he had to take care of me even when my parents were still together and he couldn’t have a life cause he was always busy with me.

I think they want to get married and i’m scared about where i will go. After school i wanted to use my brothers phone to watch something.

I saw a notification come up at the top and it was from my mom. I was really curious because i don’t talk to my mom like ever.

Long story short he wants to send me to live with my mom in Korea because Julie wants to move in and start a family.

She said that when they start their family they don’t want to be looking after a teenager as well. I didn’t tell him anything...

but my cousin's mom (my aunt) ended up asking him why he was going to send me to live with my mom. My brother took me back home...

he asked me how i knew and i told him i saw his texts. I was really mad and i was yelling at him. Then like 10 minutes later Julie...

When she came in... I stood up and started yelling that i don’t know why she has a problem with me but im his sister so im not leaving.

I also called her some names because i was really angry. Then, to my surprise, my brother pushed my shoulder and told me to go to my room.

AITA for yelling at my brother girlfriend?

Update: I wrote a letter to my brother... He booked a ticket for me and him to go to Korea to see my mother, her husband and house.

I’m fine with that because if he’s there with me then he can’t leave me there without me knowing. But he told me he is leaving a little earlier than...

Update 2: Hi again. On friday last week i, against what many people advised, got on the plane to Korea.

We arrived on saturday in Jeju, a korean island... I talked to my mother about everything. It’s a long story but after my parents divorce she wanted to keep me,

but my father told her that taking me to Korea... would be a big mistake and she felt scared to go against him.

The reason there was conversation of me going to Korea was because... Julie thought... they don’t want to be looking after a teenager.

The ticket is a return ticket but honestly i don’t know if i want to go back to the USA. I don’t want to be where im not wanted...

My mom's husband says he will tutor me. My stepbrother helps me with my korean homework and we go to the beach together

even though he barely speaks english and i barely speak korean. My brother is still here with me but is leaving on friday.

His plan now is to come back to Korea to take me back to america so that i know he isn’t leaving me here.

His plan changed because i told him i was scared he was going to abandon me too. I want to thank everyone for all the suggestions and advice

but i would rather be here than emancipated or even in america. I don’t want to be reminded of my brother if i don’t get to stay with him...

The sad thing is i could’ve stayed in america if i fought hard enough but im just so tired. Im tired of feeling like this and im tired of no...

I’m sorry to everyone that i disappointed by not being strong enough to stand my ground and stay in the usa, but i believe that

if i stayed it would have just gotten worse. Why would i want to live my life pandering to people who didn’t want me in the first place. Im clearly...

This story leaves a hollow ache in your chest.

We are watching a 15-year-old girl grapple with a feeling no child should ever have to process: disposability. The devastating line, “I’m just so tired of no one wanting me,” highlights the profound emotional damage inflicted by the adults in her life.

While the brother stepped up admirably when he was 18, the transition here was handled with shocking insensitivity. To plan a cross-continental move behind a child’s back is a betrayal of trust. And let’s be real about Julie: Moving into a home and demanding the removal of a dependent sibling is a level of callousness that’s hard to ignore. She isn’t just asking for space; she’s asking for a clean slate at the expense of a human being.

However, the twist is surprisingly hopeful. The mother in Korea, painted as a villain by circumstance, seems to be stepping up in a genuine way. Perhaps the “abandonment” was more complex than the OP knew. Sometimes, where we end up isn’t where we wanted to be, but it’s where we need to be to heal.

Expert Opinion

This tragic family saga is a classic example of parentification followed by attachment rupture.

According to Psychology Today, siblings who raise siblings often experience burnout. The brother likely feels he has “served his time” and deserves a life of his own. While his desire for independence is valid, the execution was psychologically damaging.

Dr. John Bowlby’s Attachment Theory explains the OP’s despair. Children need a “secure base.” When her primary attachment figure (her brother) conspired to send her away, that base shattered. Her reaction, “I just feel nothing”, is a trauma response known as emotional dissociation. She is detaching to survive the pain of rejection.

But let’s look at the cultural nuance. Moving a child to a country where they don’t speak the language is immensely stressful. Studies on “Third Culture Kids” show they often struggle with identity. However, they also develop high adaptability.

The fact that the OP is bonding with her stepbrother and finding peace in Jeju suggests post-traumatic growth. She is choosing the environment where she feels seen, even if it’s foreign, over the environment where she is familiar but invisible.

My advice to the OP would be to lean into this fresh start. You aren’t “weak” for staying in Korea; you are incredibly strong for recognizing that you deserve to be in a home where you aren’t treated as a burden. If your mother is offering genuine connection, take it. Healing starts where the fighting ends.

Check out how the community responded:

Virtually everyone agreed that the true villains of this story weren’t even in the room initially: the parents who abandoned their children and forced an 18-year-old to become a father.

Mammoth_Duck4343 - Mom and dad are massive, massive AHs as they abandoned their child. All others are NTA and victims of the situation.

DrunkOnWeedASD - Your parents are evil garbage. Your brother could have been more considerate, but he should have never been put in this situation either.

SubUrbanMess2021 - Specific YTA to your parents for not taking responsibility for you and putting the burden on your brother.

The community was split on the brother. Some saw him as a victim of parentification who reached his limit, while others felt he betrayed the sister he raised.

Goochimus - I think your brother is a major [jerk]. He did a really good thing raising you...

But now that things are inconvenient for him he wants you to go? That’s not what you do to family.

starrynight764 - Your brother had to put his own life on hold because of you...

This way of living is not sustainable in the long run for him... I don’t blame your brother either.

Defiant-Desk1735 - Nah I’m going against the grain here... He took responsibility for his sister and now wants to ship her off? No brother of mine would ever do this.

Many users were rightfully horrified by the idea of sending a non-Korean-speaking minor to a country she barely knows.

blue-bumblebee9 - Going to a different country to a so called mother that abandoned you 7 years ago... is a huge change

A trauma even. She is a human being not a parcel to be passed around.

PotatoPotato76 - From her perspective, she's been abandoned by everyone she loved. And she's still a kid.

Old enough to see that writing on the wall, but not old enough to fend for herself. That's gotta take a toll.

Interestingly, after the updates, some users felt that leaving might actually be the healthiest option for the OP to escape the feeling of being unwanted.

Hempsox - I just don't get all these people saying that the brother and the gf are not at fault...

But she would rather be here [Korea] than emancipated or even in america. I don’t want to be reminded of my brother if i don’t get to stay with him.

How to Navigate Being “Unwanted”

This is one of the hardest feelings a human can endure. If you are ever in a position where you feel disposable to your caregivers:

  1. Stop Auditioning for Love: You cannot earn someone’s love by being “less trouble” or “more helpful.” As the OP realized, pandering to people who view you as a burden is exhausting and futile. Accept their limitations, not yours. They aren’t rejecting you; they are rejecting the responsibility they aren’t equipped to handle.

  2. Look for the Open Door: The OP found a surprising “open door” in Jeju. Sometimes the solution isn’t fighting to stay where you are, but bravely walking into the unknown. Look for the people who do make space for you, whether that is a friend, a distant relative, or a new community.

  3. Validate Your Own Grief: It is okay to be angry. It is okay to yell. When the people supposed to protect you fail, your rage is a sign of self-respect. Don’t suppress it, but try to channel it into building a life where you are the priority.

Conclusion

This story is a brutal reminder of the ripple effects of parental abandonment. A brother tried his best until he couldn’t, and a sister paid the price. But in the quiet seaside town of Jeju, the OP might just find the one thing she hasn’t had in seven years: a parent who is fighting to keep her, not fighting to leave her.

So, is the OP better off in Korea? Or did the brother make the biggest mistake of his life by letting her go?

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Marry Anna, a lively writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT, is known for his energetic style in entertainment journalism. With a focus on accuracy, Marry Anna explores celebrities' lives, providing unique insights and interviews.

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