Some family wounds don’t bleed, they just quietly reopen at the worst possible time.
This mom-to-be already carried a heavy emotional backpack into her pregnancy. She and her husband built two small businesses, kept grinding through COVID chaos, and survived a miscarriage that changed how “excited” can feel.
Then the miracle happened, she got pregnant again. Her parents suddenly acted warm and attentive. For once, she felt chosen.
And then her sister announced a twin pregnancy, and the temperature in the room shifted.
The sister, who relies on their parents financially, became the main event again. The due dates crept closer. The comparisons started forming in OP’s mind like storm clouds.
OP tried to stay reasonable. She didn’t demand a huge party. She accepted a virtual baby shower because she lives out of state. She trusted her mom to handle it.
April 11 arrived. Nothing happened. Then her mom texted an elaborate invitation. Not for OP. For her sister.
Now, read the full story:



















That April 11 silence hits like a door shutting, quietly, on purpose, with a lock you can hear click.
OP didn’t demand a catered event. She didn’t act entitled. She asked for a virtual shower, checked in a few times, and trusted the person who promised to show up.
Then her mom sent the sister’s invite like a glittery little “by the way,” and somehow that feels sharper than a direct insult.
When someone forgets you once, it stings. When someone forgets you and then celebrates someone else in the same breath, it leaves a mark.
OP’s story screams a familiar family role pattern: one child gets rescued and celebrated, the other gets expected to cope quietly. People often call it “golden child and scapegoat,” but you don’t need labels to feel the impact.
Parental favoritism shows up in research over and over, and it doesn’t stay contained to childhood. A Cornell study led by gerontologist Karl Pillemer found that perceived favoritism still affects adult children’s mental health. He put it bluntly: “Perceived favoritism from one’s mother still matters to a child’s psychological well-being.”
That line matters here because OP isn’t asking for perfection. She’s asking for basic presence. Her mother promised a shower, confirmed it in texts, ignored follow-up calls, then produced a polished invitation for the sister. That sequence looks less like forgetfulness and more like priority.
The same Cornell report includes a statistic that makes this feel less “in OP’s head” and more like a known social pattern. Researchers found that 70% of moms surveyed named a child they felt closest to, and only 15% of children perceived equal treatment.
So yes, favoritism happens. The bigger problem comes when it leaks into behavior in obvious ways, the kind that shapes milestones, attention, and support.
A Guardian piece discussing large-scale research on parental favoritism captured the nuance perfectly through Pillemer again: “We can’t help how we feel, but we can definitely help how we act towards our children.”
OP’s mom can feel closer to the sister. Fine.
OP’s mom still controls her actions. And her actions sent a loud message.
Now layer pregnancy on top. Pregnancy already heightens vulnerability. Add a previous miscarriage, and the nervous system stays on alert. Research on pregnancy loss notes many people experience anxiety, stress, and depressive symptoms afterward, and clinicians often underestimate the impact.
That context matters because OP doesn’t sound “hormonal.” She sounds like someone who already learned that joy can vanish quickly, so she watches for signs that support might vanish too.
Then the baby shower happens, or rather, doesn’t happen.
That becomes proof. Not fear.
OP also worries about her child growing up in a constant comparison game. That concern makes sense. Favoritism doesn’t just hurt the overlooked child, it warps sibling relationships long-term. Research on perceived maternal favoritism shows it predicts lower sibling closeness and higher conflict, even into adulthood.
This is why “just ignore it” rarely works. The family system keeps scoring points in the same way, again and again, until someone stops playing.
So what can OP do that actually helps?
First, stop outsourcing reality checks to hope. OP already has evidence. The texts exist. The date existed. The silence existed. She doesn’t need to argue herself into believing what happened.
Second, plan support like her parents won’t show up. That isn’t bitterness. That’s logistics. If they surprise her with kindness later, great. If not, she and her husband won’t scramble postpartum while feeling rejected.
Third, name the behavior, not the motive. “You promised a shower on April 11. You didn’t do it. You didn’t respond to my call. Then you sent my sister’s invitation.”
That keeps the focus on facts, where manipulation struggles to breathe.
Fourth, protect the child from the comparison machine. OP can allow grandparents access only if they act respectfully and consistently. Babies don’t need maximum family quantity, they need emotional safety.
Finally, grieve the parent she wishes she had. That sounds harsh, but it’s freeing. When adults keep chasing fair treatment from unfair people, they bleed energy that should go to their own home.
OP already built a family that works hard, loves hard, and shows up. She can make that the center of gravity now.
Check out how the community responded:
“A lot of people clocked the favoritism instantly, and they did not buy the ‘oops’ excuse.”





“Some commenters went straight into ‘protect your kid from being second place’ mode.”


“Others shared similar grief and pushed OP to say it out loud, clearly.”



![Mom “Forgets” Daughter’s Baby Shower, Then Sends Sister’s Invite Like Nothing Happened [Reddit User] - You seem to have a golden child sister. I wouldn’t put it past her to move the c-section to steal attention, based on your story.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/wp-editor-1772081564941-4.webp)
OP’s gut isn’t malfunctioning. It’s collecting data.
A promised baby shower with a confirmed date doesn’t evaporate by accident, especially when the same person can plan an elaborate event for the sister right after. That sequence teaches OP exactly where she sits in the family hierarchy.
The painful part is that pregnancy makes you want softness. It makes you want the “mom” you see in movies, the one who fusses over you, checks in, and shows up. OP tried therapy. She tried forgiveness. She tried staying connected for the sake of future grandparents and cousins.
Now she faces a different kind of work. She has to build a reality-based plan that protects her peace and her baby’s emotional world.
So what do you think? If a parent forgets one baby shower and prioritizes another, does that count as a mistake, or a pattern? And if OP steps back now, does she protect her child, or does she risk more family fallout?


















