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She Bought a House for Her Parents, Then Her Mom Secretly Moved the “Mooching” Sister In and Expected Everything to Be Fine

by Sunny Nguyen
April 19, 2026
in Social Issues

She thought she was doing the right thing.

A successful physician with a young family of her own, she and her husband bought a home to help her aging parents live more comfortably. Her father was dealing with advanced Parkinson’s, their savings were limited, and she stepped in, not out of obligation, but care.

There was only one clear boundary. Her sister, known for unstable finances and destructive living habits, was not to move in. No exceptions.

Then one day, while her father was in the hospital, that boundary quietly disappeared.

Her mother moved the sister’s entire family into the house without telling her.

What followed wasn’t just a family disagreement. It was a full breakdown of trust, loyalty, and responsibility. And somehow, despite all of it, she’s the one being told she hasn’t done enough to fix things.

She Bought a House for Her Parents, Then Her Mom Secretly Moved the “Mooching” Sister In and Expected Everything to Be Fine
Not the actual photo

Here’s where it gets complicated.

AITAH for not “doing more” to make my Boomer mom feel welcome in my home after she blew up our relationship by secretly moving my chaotic/ mooch sister into the...

Background: I’m a physician with my own young family. Three years ago, my husband and I bought a house and moved my parents (both in their 70s/80s) down from up...

My dad has advanced Parkinson’s and very limited retirement savings. We subsidized their rent heavily so they could retire more comfortably—we never expected it to cover the full mortgage.

I have one sibling: my sister (high school only, job-to-job, married to a similar guy, have a kid).

They’ve always lived beyond their means (combined ~$80k+ income) and my mom has enabled her with money for years. They destroy properties and got evicted from their last apartment.

When we bought the house, we had an explicit conversation: under no circumstances were my sister, her husband, and son allowed to live there. We didn’t want to enable their...

Fast forward 15 months ago: My dad got COVID, went to the hospital, then to rehab.

While he was away, my mom moved my sister’s entire family into our house without telling us.

When I found out and confronted her, she claimed she “didn’t remember” our clear agreement. I was shocked and hurt.

We immediately offered to subsidize an apartment for my sister’s family so they wouldn’t burden my parents (I was ready to sign a lease the next day).

My sister refused, saying she wanted “nothing to do with me” because of the “strings attached.”

I also expressed concern about my mom’s cognitive issues (selective memory, etc.) and suggested screening for dementia—she dismissed it. (I’m an MD, so I know what I’m seeing.)

Then my mom told me she was looking for a different place to live and that I should sell the house because she wants to “do whatever she wants.”

The only “condition” we ever had was the one boundary about not enabling my sister in our property. No other rules.

They all apparently talked that night and decided I was the problem. My dad (whom I love dearly and just want stable, safe years for) said he “can’t stand up...

My sister and her family eventually moved out, but then the whole group (mom, dad, sister + husband + kid) rented a house together and have been living as one...

My parents have only ~$150k in savings, no long-term care plan, and my mom refused to sign a trust/POA we set up with an elder attorney a year earlier to...

I warned them about Texas Medicaid’s 5-year look-back for nursing home eligibility due to all the gifting.

Since then, I’ve continued inviting my parents over for holidays, dinners, and grandkid time. I’ve been nothing but kind and have explicitly forgiven the original betrayal.

My mom usually cancels or drops my dad off and leaves without staying. When I asked her today why, she said she “doesn’t feel welcome” and senses “animosity.”

Here’s where I’m struggling: Why is it on ME to go overboard making her feel welcome and doing all the emotional repair work after SHE blew up the relationship?

I bought the house, subsidized their living for years, offered real help to my sister, extended olive branch after olive branch, and kept the door open for my dad especially.

She’s done nothing to repair what she broke—no apology, no acknowledgment, just guilt-tripping and “I don’t feel welcome.”

It feels like classic Boomer behavior I see everywhere: expecting the younger generation (especially daughters) to do all the hard emotional labor, forgive instantly,

chase the relationship, and smooth everything over while they avoid accountability. My dad won’t stand up to her. My sister just wants endless enabling.

Meanwhile, I’m watching my dad’s last years potentially slip away in instability, and I’m the villain for having one reasonable boundary. AITA for not doing more to “make her feel...

Or is it fair to expect her to take some responsibility for repairing what she damaged, especially when my priority is protecting time with my dad and my own family’s...

Also- I recognize my poor nephew is a victim in all of this with parents who have no life skill, unstable housing etc.

important point is that we opened a 529 college savings account for him and contribute to it so essence ally his college,

trade school etc is completely paid for (including living expenses) when he graduates high school.

CPS has been involved but has not intervened only asked us to be a part of an emergency custody plan which of course we agreed to.

TL;DR: Mom secretly moved my enabling-needy sister into the house we own (against clear agreement)

while Dad was in the hospital. Family sided against me. I’ve kept inviting them anyway.

Now Mom says she doesn’t feel welcome and I’m supposed to do all the emotional work to fix it? Why do Boomers seem to expect everyone else to handle the...

The arrangement had started with intention and clarity. She wasn’t just helping her parents. She was protecting them. Subsidizing their housing, ensuring stability, and trying to shield them from the financial chaos her sister seemed to bring wherever she went.

That one rule, no sister in the house, wasn’t random. It was based on years of patterns. Evictions, overspending, damage left behind.

So when her father fell ill and was sent to rehab, she trusted that the system she’d built would hold.

It didn’t.

Her mother, without a word, moved her sister, brother-in-law, and nephew into the house.

When confronted, she claimed she didn’t remember the agreement. That alone was enough to shake things. Not just because of the betrayal, but because it hinted at something deeper. Possible cognitive decline, or something more intentional, selective memory.

Still, the daughter didn’t lash out. She offered a solution. She was willing to subsidize an apartment for her sister’s family, even sign a lease immediately. It was a practical compromise that would keep everyone housed without crossing boundaries.

Her sister refused. Said she wanted nothing to do with her.

That rejection seemed to solidify something behind the scenes. Conversations happened without her. Decisions were made. Suddenly, she wasn’t the one helping anymore. She was the problem.

Her father, someone she deeply loved, admitted he couldn’t stand up to her mother. That quiet resignation added another layer of heartbreak.

Eventually, the sister moved out of the house. But instead of things settling, the entire group chose to live together elsewhere, creating exactly the kind of unstable environment she had tried to prevent.

And yet, she didn’t cut them off.

She kept inviting her parents over. Holidays, dinners, time with their grandchild. She made space, emotionally and physically. She even said she forgave the original betrayal.

But her mother rarely stayed. Sometimes she would drop her father off and leave.

Then came the comment that reopened everything.

“I don’t feel welcome.”

It’s the kind of statement that shifts the emotional burden instantly. No apology, no acknowledgment of what happened, just a quiet implication that the daughter hadn’t done enough.

That’s where the frustration really lives.

Because from her perspective, she has done everything. Financial support, emotional outreach, continued invitations, even future planning for her nephew with a college fund. Meanwhile, her mother has taken no visible steps to repair the relationship she fractured.

There’s also a deeper dynamic at play. The “capable child” versus the “needy child.” One becomes the safety net. The other becomes the focus. It’s not uncommon, but it rarely feels fair.

And her father, though sympathetic, remains passive. His inability to challenge the situation means it continues unchecked.

So now she’s left in a difficult position.

Keep trying, knowing the effort may never be reciprocated. Or step back, and risk losing time with her father in his final years.

That’s not a simple choice. It’s emotional, messy, and full of quiet grief.

See what others had to share with OP:

Most people were firmly on her side, saying she had already done far more than expected. A recurring theme was that she wasn’t doing too little, she was doing too much.

Only-Breadfruit-6108 − You’re not actually responsible for your parents, who don’t seem to want your help anymore. It’s okay. Now stop chasing them.

And don’t bother with the savings account for your nephew, he’s not your problem or your responsibility. NTA now stay in your lane. Get a real tenant in your investment...

DueConsequence4072 − NTA. Quit begging for love from a woman who isn't interested in giving it to YOU. Doesn't matter the reason. Doesn't matter what you want.

The reality is you have been very not smart in how you are handling this. You have your own family. You have to make that your first priority.

Quit hosing money to people who literally do not care about you, your finances, your family. Don't grovel.

Don't bother. The answer is total disconnect. Have Pops over. Be available for your nephew. Let sister and Mom sink in their own choices. EZ.

lahdeedah224 − I suspect your mother will learn some *very, very* hard lessons when your dad is gone and she needs the same help.

Because I sure doubt your sister will help. “Don’t bite the hand that feeds you” Remember this. Do not go looking to help them again.

Many pointed out that by continuing to support her parents financially and emotionally, she might actually be enabling the same cycle she was trying to avoid.

Wise_Ad676 − Soft YTA but not for doing too little, in fact the opposite, doing WAAAAY too much. You are mad that your parents enable your sister,

yet here you are enabling your parents and by that, your sister and her family. You enable all of them. It is past time to allow them to figure their...

Lisa_Knows_Best − NTA. You've gone way beyond what most people would do. Your mother doesn't care, she's up your sister's b__t and your dad won't do anything about it.

A lot of times parent(s) focus on the child that "needs" them rather then the competent, capable, helpful children.

"You don't need me the same way she does". I can literally hear your mother saying that.

Make sure your sister can't access any of that money you saved for your nephew ever. If he doesn't end up in college do not just give him the money,...

Be prepared now for when your mother does come crawling back when she needs help because your sister has drained her dry. It will happen.

Be ready now with whatever decision you want to make with that. Sorry to sound so harsh but it's a reality. Find a place in your heart and mind to...

Others focused on her mother’s lack of accountability, noting that feeling “unwelcome” doesn’t erase the original betrayal.

New-Comment2668 − NTA. Your mom caused this problem. Your mom needs to do the work to solve it.

The more you give in, the more she will use you as a doormat. Tell your mom when she is ready to have a relationship, you will be there, but...

Fit_General7058 − Nothing to do with her generation. Its all to do with your useless sister and her manipulative behaviour.

Like you said, they had a chat and decided you were the problem. That chat has been going on for years. Your sister be moaning your successes to them and...

Cranky70something − I'm a boomer, and I don't pull crap like that. Attributing your mother's bad behavior to her age cohort is not useful.

However, NTA. The two of you made an agreement. She breached it. I wish you and your family the very best.

Icy-Mix-6550 − NTA. I think you've done too much. Just let mom live out her life with her golden child, i. e. your sister, and let the chips fall where...

Your mom doesn't have memory issues, she has selective memory, she remembers what she wants and conveniently forgets what she doesn't like.

Let mom continue to be a baby about it and I'd quit inviting her to my house. She betrayed you.

calminthedark − NTA I lost my dad a few years ago and in our family, my dad was well loved. But like your dad, he avoided conflict, especially with our...

When he developed dementia, she started blowing through every dime he had ever saved, which also benefited her golden child. The last few years was us scrambling to find him...

My siblings still place dad's memory on a pedestal. But the truth is, he enabled her for years and that contributed to the difficulties we had caring for him in...

You love your dad and I understand that. But because he has allowed your mother to set up this dynamic, he is part of the problem.

You can't really save him from the consequences of his inaction. You can try to make it a little bit easier on him, but the time to "fix" this was...

So give yourself some grace and understand that what you can do is limited, you can love your dad and recognize his part in this.

There’s a quiet kind of exhaustion that comes from being the responsible one. The one who plans, provides, and keeps showing up, even when it’s not returned.

In this case, the issue isn’t whether she’s done enough. It’s whether she should keep trying at the same level when the other side hasn’t met her halfway.

Her mother broke trust. That’s a fact. Repairing that doesn’t happen through vague discomfort or guilt-driven comments. It takes ownership, something that hasn’t shown up yet.

And sometimes, protecting your own peace isn’t selfish. It’s necessary.

So the real question isn’t just about being right or wrong.

It’s about knowing when effort turns into self-sacrifice, and whether it’s okay to finally step back.

Would you keep the door open, or start closing it for your own sake?

 

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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