Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result
  • Social Issues
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Parents Treated Their “Miracle Child” Like Royalty, Then Blamed Their Other Daughter For Leaving

by Annie Nguyen
July 17, 2026
in Social Issues

Growing up with siblings often means dealing with a little favoritism now and then, but there is a huge difference between feeling overlooked and being treated like you matter less. When one child is constantly put on a pedestal, the other can spend years wondering if they will ever be enough.

That is the painful reality facing this 18 year old Redditor, who says her parents have spent her entire life treating her older sister like a miracle while expecting her to quietly accept being second best.

After finally moving out, she has refused to keep pretending everything is normal, a decision that has only widened the divide between them. Scroll down to read why she feels walking away may be the only option left.

For most of her childhood, the young woman felt as though her parents had already decided that one daughter mattered more

Parents Treated Their “Miracle Child” Like Royalty, Then Blamed Their Other Daughter For Leaving
not the actual photo

'My parents (54M, 52F) think of my sister (20F) as their miracle child and they hate me (18F) for refusing to have anything to do with her now.'

My sister (20F) was a preemie and my parents (54M, 52F) have always babied her because of it.

She can say anything, ask for anything, do anything and it's all good.

My parents will buy her what she wants and let her get away with everything/anything.

It has ruined her and she's a really s__tty and difficult person who just won't treat people decently.

My parents always have excuses for her. Like always. But me (18F)? I could never get away with anything.

Not even bad stuff but if I wasn't feeling good they made me go to school regardless and they'd let her stay home.

One time I felt really bad and slept in school and my parents were just like oh well you had nothing that required you staying home.

There were times for Christmas I would try to match my sister's price point for gifts and my parents always refused to get me too expensive gifts.

But she could ask for a thousand worth of stuff and that was fine.

I was lucky to have them spend $150 total and when they did spend that much I was told I had to share with my sister.

My sister loved to brag about this stuff and she loved to say I wasn't special like her. My parents never cared.

They would get mad at me if I tried to fight back.

I even got grounded for calling my sister a bully when she was trying to humiliate me in front of her friends

with all the insults and saying I wasn't special and comparing the stuff she gets all the time vs me.

My friends were told they needed to leave and that I was never going to hang out with them again

because I was being hateful to my sister and that it wasn't fair to her. I was grounded for three weeks for that too.

I resent my parents too but I still have that part of me that wishes they loved me like my sister.

Honestly I wish they loved me period because I'm not even that sure they do. I'm not special in their eyes, that much is clear.

But I also know they hate me now because I moved out of their house before my birthday and I refuse to have anything to do with my sister.

My grandpa let me move in with him and my parents were mad at him for helping me avoid my sister.

They told me I should be ashamed of myself for treating my sister like I have and they brought up how sick

she was as a baby and acted like that makes her behavior okay. I wasn't even alive when that happened!!!

I hate wanting my parents love and I hate being the least favorite for both parents and being treated like s__t

by my sister who can do whatever and I just have to take it in my parents minds.

But I'm not sure I'm in a place where I could stop talking to my parents totally.

My grandpa has me working on finding a therapist so I could get to a place where I could go no contact.

But that's still a work in progress so I'd like advice because it hurts to be treated like this.

My grandpa even gets so much s__t when he tries to defend and advocate for me with my parents.

One of the deepest emotional wounds a person can carry is not the absence of parents, but the feeling of growing up beside them without ever feeling equally loved.

Children naturally look to their parents for reassurance that they matter, and when affection, attention, or protection consistently seem reserved for a sibling, the pain often becomes part of how they see themselves.

That longing does not disappear simply because someone turns eighteen or moves out. It is entirely possible to recognize that a relationship is unhealthy while still grieving the love you wish it could have been.

From a third-person perspective, the OP’s decision to distance herself from her sister did not emerge from one argument or isolated incident.

It followed years of unequal treatment, repeated humiliation, and parents who consistently excused one child’s behavior while punishing the other for reacting to it. The details matter because the pattern was remarkably consistent.

The sister received greater financial support, greater freedom, and protection from consequences, while the OP was expected to tolerate insults, share gifts that were supposedly hers, and accept punishments for defending herself. Leaving home and moving in with her grandfather was not simply an act of rebellion.

It appears to have been an attempt to create the emotional and physical safety that had long been missing. The fact that she still longs for her parents’ love despite everything illustrates how powerful the parent-child bond remains, even when it is deeply painful.

A different perspective is that the parents may genuinely believe they are acting out of love rather than favoritism. Parents who experience a frightening medical crisis with one child sometimes become emotionally overprotective long after the danger has passed.

That protective instinct can unintentionally evolve into overindulgence, lowered expectations, and constant justification of harmful behavior. The tragedy is that this often harms both children.

The favored child may struggle to develop accountability, while the other child grows up feeling invisible and less worthy of care. Explaining how the imbalance developed, however, is not the same as excusing its effects. Good intentions cannot erase years of unequal treatment.

Psychologist Dr. Ellen Weber Libby, author of The Favorite Child, explains that perceived parental favoritism can have lasting psychological effects on every sibling in a family.

Children who consistently feel less valued often develop chronic self-doubt, grief, and an ongoing desire to earn affection that never feels secure.

Libby emphasizes that the emotional impact comes not only from differences in treatment but also from parents’ refusal to acknowledge those differences when they are pointed out.

That perspective helps explain why the OP remains emotionally torn. Her wish for her parents’ approval does not mean she is weak or failing to move on. It reflects a normal human need that was never fully met.

Therapy can be especially valuable because it focuses not on convincing someone to stop loving their parents, but on helping them separate their self-worth from the approval they have spent years trying to earn.

Her grandfather’s support already provides something equally important: one consistent adult who believes her experiences and treats them as real.

Ultimately, healing does not require pretending that the family was fair, nor does it require forcing immediate forgiveness or permanent no contact. Those decisions should happen only when they support the OP’s well-being rather than someone else’s expectations.

For now, creating distance from people who repeatedly cause harm while building relationships with those who offer safety, respect, and genuine care may be the healthiest foundation from which to decide what, if any, future relationship with her parents is possible.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

These commenters focused on OP’s need to stop seeking validation from parents who have repeatedly hurt them, while encouraging self-worth, healing, and possibly therapy

Ok-Crow-u-crazy − They don't deserve you hun, you have done nothing wrong. Your genetic donors are just horrible people.

I can tell you now it hurts, but it will fade. Embrace your grandfather's love and help.

I would recommend looking into some self love books, these will help you to learn that you deserve everything.

JosieJOK − I hate wanting my parents love I don't know about any other species, but humans are hard-wired to want their parents' love.

Don't beat yourself up about it. You're doing the right thing by getting away from your parents and sister--just focus on your own life.

I hope you can get therapy and that it's helpful.

Maybe one day far in the future (not now, though), you'll be able to be sorry for both your parents and your sister.

Your parents have not been able to move past the circumstances of your sister's birth,

it's made them s__tty parents and they've raised *her* to make it her entire personality.

Both she and they have some hard lessons coming,

because to everyone else in the world, she's not special and her birth doesn't excuse her s__tty personality.

Non-sense-syllables − I say this out of kindness, you need to stop expecting anything from your parents.

They have shown you who they are. You will continue to be hurt by them because they won’t change. Trust me I know.

There is this societal expectation that we have to love and respect our parents

but that’s only true if your parents love and respect you, which, I’m sorry to say they don’t.

Let them go, you will feel down about it sometimes, but in time you’ll feel that less and less

and you’ll realise how destructive their presence in your life was. Also do get that therapy,

This group challenged the parents’ logic, explaining that a difficult birth or medical history does not justify treating one child as more valuable than another

pookapotomus2 − I’ve had two preemies (out of 6 kids) this is unhinged.

My youngest boy died at birth, longest two minutes of my life. He gets the same stuff as his siblings.

Obviously we are beyond thankful he pulled through, but that doesn’t make him magically more important than his siblings.

He’s a wonderful special child, so are every one of them

MidlifeMum − Your parents have also done a grave disservice to your sister!

They may have been traumatized by how sick she was at birth but none of that is on you or her,

and has nothing to do with how "special" either of you are. By making your lives all about their trauma they prove how selfish they are.

Go succeed and be the special person you always were and are meant to be. And give your grandfather the biggest hug.

These commenters highlighted the long-term emotional impact of being the overlooked child and suggested looking into support resources and therapy to process the experience

Kimono-Ash-Armor − Look into Glass Child Syndrome, there is support here on Reddit. You are definitely one.

Check out https://www.reddit.com/r/GlassChildren/s/A8jIASaGrm

Anna_S_1608 − You can't change your parents, or they way they treat you, but you can change how it affects you.

People often say look into therapy but in your case, I really think it could help you get past this.

This group focused on patterns of favoritism and golden-child dynamics

Sidneyreb − Your sister was 2 when you were born. They’ve had 18 years to accept the fact that they had a healthy baby instead of punishing you for it.

Southern-Midnight741 − From what I have seen with family that has a golden child, even with proof, they will never admit their faults and favoritism towards one child.

EveryAsk3855 − Ugh, same thing happened to me. My sister was born at 3.8 pounds, 6 weeks early.

She got away with everything. She always took my stuff. She’s always been entitled.

She’s younger than me though.

She is a little better now because she had two kids but I will always be resentful. It was only my dad who allowed this though.

At my mom’s house she didn’t get away with stuff. We were always held to a different standard.

I have no advice. Except I sympathize. I would cut off the parents when you can. They won’t listen.

Do you think limited contact could ever work in a family like this, or is complete distance the only way to break the golden-child cycle?

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

Related Posts

Karen Demands the Ride Stop – Operator Parks Her at the Top Until She Breaks Down
Social Issues

Karen Demands the Ride Stop – Operator Parks Her at the Top Until She Breaks Down

10 months ago
Customer Service Demands To Speak To A Deaf Woman, So Her Brother Gives Them Exactly What They Asked For
Social Issues

Customer Service Demands To Speak To A Deaf Woman, So Her Brother Gives Them Exactly What They Asked For

9 months ago
Wife With Big Age Gap Marriage Suddenly Questions Everything About Her Relationship
Social Issues

Wife With Big Age Gap Marriage Suddenly Questions Everything About Her Relationship

3 months ago
Woman Leaves Bachelorette Trip Early After Hidden Costs Pile Up, Friends Call Her Rude
Social Issues

Woman Leaves Bachelorette Trip Early After Hidden Costs Pile Up, Friends Call Her Rude

11 months ago
Young Mother Cuts Off Financial Help To Homeless Sister After Brutal Parenting Insult
Social Issues

Young Mother Cuts Off Financial Help To Homeless Sister After Brutal Parenting Insult

7 months ago
“She Is Weird”: Sister Defends Herself When Brother’s Girlfriend Gets Moody Over Video Games
Social Issues

“She Is Weird”: Sister Defends Herself When Brother’s Girlfriend Gets Moody Over Video Games

7 months ago

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POST

Email me new posts

Email me new comments

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.




  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
“Your Daughter or My Son?” – She Chose to Protect Her Child and Kicked Them Out

“Your Daughter or My Son?” – She Chose to Protect Her Child and Kicked Them Out

August 4, 2025
Teen Refused To Give His Cousin A Free Honeymoon After She Didn’t Invite Him To Her Wedding

Teen Refused To Give His Cousin A Free Honeymoon After She Didn’t Invite Him To Her Wedding

August 11, 2025
Roommates Boldly Try To Evict Woman, Discover Too Late It’s Actually Her Home All Along

Roommates Boldly Try To Evict Woman, Discover Too Late It’s Actually Her Home All Along

December 9, 2025
Brother’s Wife Stole Their Baby Name – So Parents Secretly Swapped It and Left Her Furious

Brother’s Wife Stole Their Baby Name – So Parents Secretly Swapped It and Left Her Furious

September 12, 2025
‘All The Queen’s Men’ Is Getting The Second Season On BET+

‘All The Queen’s Men’ Is Getting The Second Season On BET+

2
Wife Threatens Divorce After Husband Ignores Daughter Over Misophonia And College Prep

Wife Threatens Divorce After Husband Ignores Daughter Over Misophonia And College Prep

2
Dad Sells His Teen Son’s Christmas PS4 To “Protect His Grades,” Brother Explodes And Family Turns Against Him

Dad Sells His Teen Son’s Christmas PS4 To “Protect His Grades,” Brother Explodes And Family Turns Against Him

1
Graduating 22-Year-Old Bans Sister’s Shady Fiancé From Graduation Party, Due To Alarming Reasons

Graduating 22-Year-Old Bans Sister’s Shady Fiancé From Graduation Party, Due To Alarming Reasons

1
Parents Treated Their “Miracle Child” Like Royalty, Then Blamed Their Other Daughter For Leaving

Parents Treated Their “Miracle Child” Like Royalty, Then Blamed Their Other Daughter For Leaving

July 17, 2026
Parents Reached Out After 10 Years, Only After Their Other Child Was Institutionalized

Parents Reached Out After 10 Years, Only After Their Other Child Was Institutionalized

July 17, 2026
Man Comes Home to Share His Terminal Diagnosis, Finds His Wife in Bed With His Business Partner Instead

Man Comes Home to Share His Terminal Diagnosis, Finds His Wife in Bed With His Business Partner Instead

July 17, 2026
Mom Kept Selling Her Eggs, Then She Emptied the Fridge Before Breakfast Without Asking

Mom Kept Selling Her Eggs, Then She Emptied the Fridge Before Breakfast Without Asking

July 17, 2026

Recent Posts

Parents Treated Their “Miracle Child” Like Royalty, Then Blamed Their Other Daughter For Leaving

Parents Treated Their “Miracle Child” Like Royalty, Then Blamed Their Other Daughter For Leaving

July 17, 2026
Parents Reached Out After 10 Years, Only After Their Other Child Was Institutionalized

Parents Reached Out After 10 Years, Only After Their Other Child Was Institutionalized

July 17, 2026
Man Comes Home to Share His Terminal Diagnosis, Finds His Wife in Bed With His Business Partner Instead

Man Comes Home to Share His Terminal Diagnosis, Finds His Wife in Bed With His Business Partner Instead

July 17, 2026
Mom Kept Selling Her Eggs, Then She Emptied the Fridge Before Breakfast Without Asking

Mom Kept Selling Her Eggs, Then She Emptied the Fridge Before Breakfast Without Asking

July 17, 2026

Browse by Category

  • Blog
  • CELEB
  • Comics
  • DC
  • DISNEY
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • Illustrations
  • Lifestyle
  • MCU
  • MOVIE
  • News
  • NFL
  • Social Issues
  • Sport
  • Star Wars
  • TV

Follow Us

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Syndication
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

No Result
View All Result
  • Social Issues
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM