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A Woman Refuses to Help Her Mother Financially After Years of Favoritism Toward Her Brother – Is She Wrong for Saying No?

by Sunny Nguyen
September 21, 2025
in Social Issues

Family favoritism is the kind of wound that never fully heals. For one 25-year-old woman, it started early. While her younger brother was pampered, excused, and defended, she was handed chores, punishments, and bills.

At just 18, her mom demanded she pay rent. Meanwhile, her brother, now 21, is still living at home rent-free.

Fast forward a few years, and the tables have turned. The daughter has carved out a successful life, running her father’s business, owning her own condo, and driving a car she bought herself.

Her mother, however, has hit hard times, staring down debt and the threat of foreclosure. And suddenly, the “unfavored child” is the one Mom is calling for rescue.

A Woman Refuses to Help Her Mother Financially After Years of Favoritism Toward Her Brother - Is She Wrong for Saying No?

When Mom’s Favoritism Backfires – Here’s The Original Post:

'AITA for not helping my mom financially because of how she treated me compared to my brother growing up?'

 

Ever since I (25F) could remember my mom has always showed favoritism to my brother (21M) and treated us differently. She basically babied the s**t out of him all my...

She'd do everything for him, cook, clean up after him, whatever he wanted she'd get for him etc. If my brother and I got into a fight she'd almost always...

If my brother did something wrong she'd always drag me into the situation and discipline me too for whatever reason.

If I got so angry with my brother, because growing up he was a little s**t, and I started yelling at him she'd get mad at me for yelling at...

If my brother asked me something and I said no, she'd get mad at me for saying no. When I was 18 she started charging me "rent", my brother is...

She was always short with me, made passive aggressive comments all the time to me and just clearly didn't want to see me succeed.

When I was 20 I moved out of my moms and went to stay with my dad, which extremely offended her and the relationship was never the same. We had...

Fast forward to today, I pretty much run my dads business. Dad is semi-retired and travels between my country and his home country every month.

I make good money here at the business, own my own condo, have a new car I paid for myself, and am just overall doing good.

Ever since I can remember my mom has had financial issues, she's always lived cheque to cheque and can't save money.

The past few months my moms been contacting me more, last week she asked if we can have a serious conversation.

She explained to me that she can see that I'm doing well for myself and she needs money.

She in a lot of debt and possibly could lose her house. She said she asked my dad for money, and he refused.

I asked her why she doesn't ask her husband? (she's remarried, but they don't live together because she refuses to let him move in, whole other story).

She started going off on me saying that's her business and she's asking me, not him.

I said no, you treat my like a POS growing up, barely contact me and now you want me to give you money? She said after all the thing's she...

She's been telling my other family members how I said no and they've been up my ass messaging and calling me saying it's the right thing to do, and to...

Even my brother has been telling me how that's so cold that I refuse to help her, because financially I'm in a good place.

I feel like s**t because my mom could possibly lose her house, but I feel like that's not my responsibility and I'm being taken advantage of if I say yes.

AITA? (EDIT: Thanks for the Silver guys!!)

The Ask That Broke the Silence

The relationship between mother and daughter had already cooled into low contact, the kind of strained truce that keeps old hurts at arm’s length. But when finances got dire, Mom reached out, not to her golden son, but to the daughter she once sidelined.

The request? A bailout, big enough to keep the house afloat. The daughter’s answer was short, direct, and final: no.

That single refusal triggered a family storm. Relatives began circling, guilt-tripping her about compassion, duty, and “helping your own blood.” The brother, predictably, stayed silent on his end of the bargain, leaving her as the villain for not stepping in.

More Than Just Money

On paper, this looks like a simple financial decision. But beneath the dollars lies a deeper truth: saying no was about reclaiming power.

Years of favoritism had left scars, from being blamed unfairly to feeling second best. To her, writing a check would have meant erasing all that pain without ever receiving acknowledgment or change.

From the mother’s point of view, the plea may have been pure desperation. In her eyes, she raised her daughter, and in a crisis, children are supposed to step up. But when you’ve repeatedly made one child feel disposable, is it any wonder that help isn’t freely given?

The Psychology of Favoritism

Research shows this dynamic isn’t rare. A 2022 Journal of Family Psychology study revealed that 65% of adult children who experienced favoritism reported ongoing strain with parents, often leading to emotional distance and financial boundaries (APA).

Family therapist Dr. Susan Forward put it bluntly in her book Toxic Parents: “Favoritism creates resentment that can persist into adulthood, making children less inclined to offer support.” (Psychology Today)

Favoritism plants seeds of resentment, and when the harvest comes, it often looks like refusal.

Could There Have Been Another Way?

There are always alternatives. Instead of a flat “no,” she might have offered non-financial support: connecting her mom with budgeting tools, financial advisors, or community resources. Such gestures could ease guilt without crossing boundaries.

But there’s also power in holding firm. Sometimes, drawing a hard line is the only way to protect peace of mind, especially when the history of hurt runs deep. Success doesn’t obligate anyone to bankroll those who dismissed them.

When Families Call It Karma

Relatives may see her refusal as spiteful, even karmic revenge. But from her perspective, it’s survival. She built independence precisely because she couldn’t rely on her mother’s support. Now that independence gives her the choice to say no and she’s using it.

The irony? The very favoritism that strained the family years ago has now come back to haunt her mom. By protecting her son from responsibility, she left herself with only one child capable of helping. And that’s the one she pushed away.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Most agreed the poster wasn’t wrong, calling out manipulative family tactics, pointing out it’s not their responsibility. 

[Reddit User] − When your family texts you say “you have given a lot to think about. Thank you for reaching out and giving my mom money.

She’ll be so happy to hear about your support. ” When they freak out, say“Wait, you are not giving my mom money? Then why are you reaching out.

It’s a bit weird to tell someone to give money to family when you are not giving money to family.

Regardless, there no need to worry. I totally get no one is entitled to your money. Thank you for understanding”

Lummita − NTA big time. You don't have to do anything, as you said, it's not your responsibility.

You did very well managing to get out of the bad environnement you had at home. Maybe if she lost her house she would finally decide to go live with...

obvsta7633 − NTA. You don't owe her anything. Keep your boundaries.

These replies were clear: NTA. Commenters told the person to set boundaries, remind their mom she has another child she can lean on.

DJ_Too_Supreme − NTA. I can’t stand parents who play favorites. My late grandma (mom's side) did the same thing to me and my mom.

You don’t owe your mom a thing. If she needs financial support, she can go to her "golden child" Calling me and saying it's the right thing to do and...

If these family members are so "compassionate" what's stopping them from helping your mom? Why do you have to help the one who made your childhood a living hell?

I feel like s**t because my mom could possibly lose her house, but I feel like that's not my responsibility

and I’m being taken advantage of if I say yes Don’t feel like s**t OP she brought this on herself (I like to call it karma). It isn’t your responsibility.

And I without a shread of doubt know she would’ve taken advantage of you if you said yes

Yamato_Simp_ − Nta. You should tell her to ask your brother for the money. Keep doing well for yourself. Set up boundaries and never look back.

IHaveSaidMyPiece − NTA I said no, you treat my like a POS growing up, barely contact me and now you want me to give you money? You pretty much summed...

The consensus couldn’t be louder: NTA. People urged cutting contact altogether, pointing out that parents don’t get automatic access to their children’s success.

sarcasticclown007 − Nta. I have no idea why anyone thinks they are entitled to your money.

Tell all of the relatives that are messaging and calling you about being a bad kid, "thanks, I'm so happy you are willing to help your mom financially.

Because it's obvious to you that they truly understand the situation your mother is in and you're just a stupid kid who couldn't possibly understand. "

[Reddit User] − Time for LC to become NC.

NTA.

BA_in_SoMD − NTA. Not even including how she treated you as a child, it amazes me the number of parents that see their children doing well

and then immediately assume they have the money to bail them out of whatever financial issue they have. Or an ex-spouse, WTH?

Even if you had the most amazing relationship in the world, you owe your mother nothing out of obligation - if you wanted to help her that is up to...

Flowenmountain − NTA you are still looking for your mothers approval. . Please go in therapy and go NC with your mom, it will do wonders for your mental health.

Everyone who says you should pay, reverse it around them and say why dont you help my mother if you are so invested in her wellbeing.

Drawing Boundaries, Not Bloodlines

For parents, every small act of bias adds up, shaping how children see both themselves and their family ties. For adult children, choosing whether to help is rarely about money alone. It’s about respect, memory, and fairness.

In this case, the daughter decided her boundary mattered more than her mother’s debt. Some will call her heartless, others will call her strong. Either way, she’s proof that being family doesn’t mean being a safety net, especially when love was never evenly shared.

 

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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