For five years, she poured her heart into caring for her sister’s kids and Cleo’s too, her sister’s childhood best friend. From school runs to diaper duty, she became the quiet backbone of their family circle.
At 21, with a toddler of her own and a fresh breakup, reality hit hard. She’d never held a job outside childcare, and the casual underpayment, shrugged off with “we’re family”, no longer cut it.
So she took a leap and applied for a real job. With no formal experience, she asked Cleo for a reference. Cleo agreed.
But when the call came, Cleo didn’t speak up for her. She didn’t say anything helpful at all and the job slipped away. Just like that, five years of loyalty meant nothing.

For Five Years, She Was the Go-To Babysitter – Then Came One Shocking Betrayal






A Sister’s Betrayal, A Family Divided
When she confronted Cleo, the betrayal stung deeper than words. There was no explanation. No apology. Just a casual defense from her sister, who shrugged off Cleo’s actions and told her to “let it go.”
Worse still, her sister doubled down, insisting that Cleo still needed help and was even willing to increase her pay, as if a higher hourly rate could erase the sabotage.
That’s when she decided enough was enough. She refused to continue babysitting, for Cleo or her sister.
They had dropped the children off like any other day. But this time, she closed the door and didn’t open it again.
Her mother called her cruel. Said she didn’t give proper notice. That she could be upset with Cleo, sure, but not her sister, who had “done nothing wrong.” But how could she separate the two? Her sister had stood by someone who actively undermined her future. Who lied. Who used her.
Now, her sister won’t even let her see the children she helped raise.
Was it harsh? Maybe. But it wasn’t out of nowhere.
Five years. No benefits. Sporadic payments. No acknowledgment. And now, no support.
Experts Weigh In: This Was No Innocent Mistake
This situation is a textbook example of financial manipulation, according to Dr. Linda Perrin, a family psychologist who specializes in boundary enforcement among relatives.
“When you’ve blurred the line between employment and emotional obligation, exploitation often follows, especially when the worker is young, female, and seen as part of the ‘family,’” she says. “Cleo’s actions reveal more about her need for control than any doubts about competence.”
And the fallout? It’s not just financial.
A 2024 report from The Center for Labor Equity revealed that nearly 68% of young caregivers in informal jobs (like family babysitting) reported being denied references, wages, or respect after trying to transition into traditional work. It’s a silent epidemic — and this Redditor’s story is just one of many.
Reddit’s serving up opinions hotter than a summer block party

Redditors agree: NTA. They think Cleo’s sabotaging your job hunt to keep you as her unpaid babysitter and your sister’s in on it too.



Commenters say NTA—Cleo didn’t just flake, she sabotaged you. And your sister backing her? That’s next-level betrayal.







Commenters agree the original poster (OP) is not the asshole, Cleo intentionally sabotaged OP’s job opportunity to keep free childcare.




The Cost of Loyalty: Can Family Still Mean Something When Trust Is Broken?
She didn’t walk away over a single missed payment. Or even a failed reference.
She walked away because no one, not Cleo, not her sister, not even her mother, saw her as someone trying to build a life of her own.
To them, she was just “the babysitter.” Always available. Always smiling. Always unpaid.
But when she needed help, she was alone.
Now, her family says she’s selfish. That she should have “given notice.” That she should still show up, despite being blindsided.
But is loyalty a one-way street? When someone burns the bridge, do you owe them another crossing?
What would you do if someone you trusted sabotaged your only shot at independence and your family stood behind them?
Let us know your take. Because sometimes, cutting ties is the only way to stop the bleeding.









