Imagine sacrificing thousands to fuel your sister’s dream of becoming a mom, only to be branded “selfish” when you finally chase your own. That’s the dilemma one Redditor, 34, faced after years of bankrolling her younger sister’s IVF.
When she decided to reroute her savings into a baking side hustle with a friend, her sister, 29, erupted. Their parents joined the chorus, shaming her for “choosing pastries over family.” With guilt, grief, and flour flying in every direction, the question lingers: was she wrong to say no?

This Redditor’s story is a recipe for family tension – grab a whisk!














Generosity meets exhaustion
For years, this Redditor has poured about $7,000 annually into her sister’s fertility treatments. IVF is emotionally draining and financially brutal, and she gave with no strings attached.
But eventually, she hit a wall. Rather than continue footing the bill, she put her savings toward something she’s always wanted: a small baking business. To her, it was finally time to invest in herself. To her sister, it was betrayal.
When family pressure blurs fairness
The sister’s argument was blunt: a baby should come before a bakery. Their parents echoed the sentiment, fixated on the idea of grandchildren. But that view erases the Redditor’s autonomy. She had already given thousands, well beyond what most siblings would.
Expecting her to bankroll indefinitely was unsustainable and unfair. Research backs it up: a 2023 Journal of Family Issues study found that while 65% of adults feel compelled to support family financially, overextension breeds resentment and burnout.
How the conflict might have been avoided
Much of this blow-up stemmed from silence and assumption. The Redditor gave for years without drawing boundaries, which set a precedent that she’d always give. Her sister came to see it as her “role,” and their parents leaned on that narrative too. A healthier path?
She could have had an early, honest talk about limits: “I can help for two rounds, but after that, you’ll need other funding.” The family, on their end, could have sought grants, loans, or smaller contributions from multiple relatives instead of leaning on one person. Boundaries and transparency could have prevented the guilt-ridden explosion.
Expert lens
Family therapist Dr. Pauline Boss has long argued that boundaries protect relationships, not damage them: “Without them, one member carries the load until resentment takes over” (Family Process Institute). In this case, choosing baking over IVF wasn’t about cruelty. It was about reclaiming balance.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
Many commenters emphasize that $7,000 a year is extraordinarily generous, and OP has already gone far beyond any obligation.





They agreed that the sibling had already been more than generous, and it was time to stop funding the family’s endless demands.






Others agreed the sibling had already given far more than anyone could reasonably expect, and it was time to stop being treated like an ATM.









Are these takes a perfect bake or half-baked rants?
This tale is a reminder that generosity has limits, and pursuing your own dream doesn’t make you heartless.
After years of giving, this Redditor chose to invest in herself, and the backlash revealed deeper family expectations about loyalty, money, and motherhood.
Was she right to put down the checkbook and pick up a whisk? Or should family always come first, no matter the personal cost?









