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Parents Call Teen “Self-Centered” After She Asks For A Birthday Without Her Late Twin

by Marry Anna
November 17, 2025
in Social Issues

Families often create rituals to cope with grief, especially after losing someone fragile and irreplaceable. Those traditions can feel comforting for adults who need a way to honor the loved one they lost.

This situation unfolds around a teen whose birthday has always carried emotional weight shaped long before she was old enough to understand it. As she gets older, she starts noticing how the celebration feels less like her day.

When she finally spoke up, the response from her parents left her shaken.

Parents Call Teen “Self-Centered” After She Asks For A Birthday Without Her Late Twin
Not the actual photo

'AITA for not wanting to share my birthday with my dead twin anymore?'

16F here, soon to be 17 in 3 days. I was a twin. My brother died hours after birth. He was 5 minutes older than I was.

I was told my mother went into deep depression, but with help got better over time.

I've watched videos of my birthdays from 1-6 years old, and my sharing my birthday with my brother has started at my 1rst birthday.

There's always that 5 minutes of remembrance in honor of him, and instead of having one candle on my cake, there will be an extra or extras for him.

For example, if I were 1 year, there would be 1 for him, or if I were 2, then they would add another 2, and so on.

As a kid, I didn't really understand or mind, because I got to blow out extra candles.

When I was 8, I did question it, and they told me it was in remembrance of my brother since we share the same birthday.

This carried on until my 16th, which I didn't get to celebrate, because I ended up in the hospital.

My grandpa showed up at the hospital while I was recovering with a gift and wished me and only me a happy birthday.

After he left, I realized I loved that he only acknowledged me. I realized I didn't want to keep sharing my birthday with my brother.

But then I felt guilty. I did try and speak to my parents about me just celebrating my birthday this year. But I was brushed off.

Now we come to what happened 4 days ago, and my grandpa, who is the official cake maker in my family, asked what type of cake I wanted.

I told him and added firmly With only 17 candles, please. My parents were in the next room, and they immediately came in demanding to know what I was doing.

That I should know that the other 17 candles were for my brother, and I ended up crying and told them that he's not even here, and I am.

I can't remember everything that was said, but there was a lot of shouting with me and my parents, and my grandpa, and me getting told that I'm selfish and...

Grandpa left with me. I've been at his house since the big fight.

I've been crying a lot, and Grandpa has been here for me, but I feel so guilty and need to ask, AITA?

It’s understandable that what began as a gentle remembrance has become for OP a birthday overshadowed by a weight she didn’t choose.

Her request to have “17 candles for her alone” is simply a plea to be seen as exactly that, her-own self, not half of a shared memory she never asked for. Yet the parents view it as erasing the memory of the twin they lost, and so the conflict escalates.

When one twin dies, even shortly after birth, the surviving twin may carry more than just survivor’s relief.

Epidemiological research from Sweden found that surviving twins whose co-twin died had a higher risk (HR ≈ 1.65) of being diagnosed with psychiatric disorders compared to non-bereaved twins.

That suggests the loss leaves a mark on the survivor’s emotional or identity development, even when memory of the co-twin may be minimal. Qualitative studies describe surviving twins feeling a “loss of identity” because their twin relationship was part of how they defined themselves.

In OP’s case, the ongoing ritual of sharing a birthday, and visualised annually through extra candles, may reinforce that shared identity rather than allow her individual identity to grow.

Meanwhile, the parents’ insistence possibly reflects their own unresolved grief, wherein the surviving sibling becomes a living tribute rather than a separate person.

A study of fetal-loss in twin pregnancies noted that surviving twins can become the focus of parents’ grief and hope, complicating the surviving child’s sense of self.

The family could recognise this isn’t about “forgetting” the deceased twin, but about allowing the surviving child to claim her own milestone.

A conversation facilitated with empathy, OP expresses how she feels overshadowed, the parents share their fears of forgetting.

Agree together on a new ritual, perhaps dedicating a quiet moment to remembrance separate from the birthday candles, and allow the actual birthday cake and celebration to centre only on OP.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

These Redditors said OP’s parents clearly need grief counseling and should not be using her birthday as their annual mourning ritual.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Your parents need to find another way to grieve their lost child.

Your birthday should be your celebration, not their occasion to memorialize their grief.

They need to be able to celebrate you, their living child, and find another way to memorialize your brother a different way.

DblAytch − NTA. Your parents haven’t gotten over the tragic death, and they can’t put you on the spot EVERY YEAR OF YOUR EXISTENCE.

This borders on unhinged. What will they do at your graduation? Your wedding?

They need therapy, and I’m glad your grandfather has given you a safe space. A happy 17th birthday to you.

Ohsaycanyousnark − There is an Infant Loss Remembrance Day, it may be in October, I think.

Maybe that can become a celebration/memorial of his life event if they want to do one, and leave your birthday to you? I'm so sorry you are going through this.

finite_perspective − NTA. Difficult situation to navigate. Remember, your parents have a right to grieve and remember, you have a right to have a birthday party that is just for...

Say you want to have your birthday party at your Granddad's house. If they want to do something separate on the same day, that is up to them.

You might even wish to join, but the party is the party and it's yours, not theirs.

samk2487 − NTA. Your parents are grieving, and you need to understand that it’s a grief that will never go away.

But they should not be hijacking your birthday every year to let themselves grieve. Your parents are selfish.

They need to learn how to grieve separately from your birthday, and if they want to honor him, they need to do it in their own way.

Away from your birthday celebration. My sister lost her stillborn son on my dad’s birthday about 18 years ago.

She never fails to bring it up on my dad’s birthday. It always kills the mood and leaves a dark cloud over celebrating my dad.

It has led to a lot of difficult celebrations, and some where she was excluded on purpose. I don’t blame my dad at all.

Of course, he’ll always remember the day he lost his first grandchild, but he doesn’t need his birthday ruined every year because of it.

This cluster didn’t hold back, they felt OP’s parents were prioritizing their grief over their daughter’s entire existence.

thejackalreborn − NTA, your parents need to grieve, is understandable, but they're going about it the wrong way.

Your feelings are completely valid, and I agree with everything you write. Your birthday cake should be for you.

Not particularly similar, but I'm a twin and we always got separate cakes.

I wouldn't have wanted to share a cake with my twin on our birthday, and we were in the same room.

AdOne8433 − NTA. Your parents have never thrown you a birthday party. Every party was a funeral for their golden child.

You're just the also-ran. Every year, they use you to throw themselves their annual pity party.

The only thing they're celebrating is their poor parental heartbreak. Your birthday has absolutely nothing to do with you or your deceased brother.

Time for you to refuse to participate in their m__bid funeral rites. Find some friends and actually celebrate your birthday for the first time.

StAlvis − NTA. This ghost-baby-birthday b__lshit is abusive. It should have never happened, let alone for the years and YEARS it did.

Your mom needs to sort her feelings out such that she can put this ancient trauma to rest.

I ended up crying and told them that he's not even here, and I am Worse, he was never really here.

Your parents are mourning lost potential, rather than celebrating your actual existence.

Ok_Childhood_9774 − NTA, and you're not selfish, but your parents are and have been for your entire life.

Losing a child is an unimaginable pain, but forcing a child who has no memory of or connection to a sibling to 'share' their life is cruel and sick.

They should have been in therapy until they could find a way to grieve without dragging you down.

[Reddit User] − The whole cake thing is super m__bid. Your parents are dragging your special day into THEIR grief problems.

You have every right to have a boundary around lots appropriate for your celebration.

I hope they get therapy. It really sucks they are giving you a n__ty attitude about it. NTA.

These Redditors shared their own experiences to show how damaging it is when family grief overshadows a child’s milestones.

SebrinePastePlaydoh − NTA. I am a twinless twin. My brother passed when we were 19. I may carry him in my heart and think of him.

I have not had a joint celebration. If you need someone to talk to, my DMs are open.

ActuaryAncient2356 − I understand this. I share a birthday with my grand aunt, whom I never met.

She died before I was born, but she was apparently everyone's favorite. She's always mentioned on my birthday, and it's seriously annoying and hurtful. NTA.

P.S. Here's a Happy birthday for your up and upcoming 17th birthday 🎂

This group wrapped OP in warmth, reminding her that none of this is her fault.

Iamthewalrus2005 − NTA. Your grandpa knows what’s up.

BengalBBQ − It's your parents who are being selfish. They are forcing their grief on you, and that's not fair. NTA.

EndielXenon − Oh, honey. No. YOU are not the one who's being selfish here. Your parents absolutely are, and this is not healthy.

You are absolutely NTA to want your parents to focus on you for once in your life without putting an asterisk on your life.

This story hits a tender place where grief and growing up collide, and the OP is stuck carrying the emotional weight of a loss she never truly experienced. Wanting her own birthday isn’t selfish.

It’s a sign she’s finally stepping into her own identity instead of standing in a memorial spotlight she never chose. But family wounds can run deep, and her parents clearly haven’t healed the way they think they have.

Do you think she was right to draw a line, or should she have kept the tradition for her parents’ sake? Share your thoughts below.

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Hello, lovely readers! I’m Marry Anna, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. As a woman over 30, I bring my curiosity and a background in Creative Writing to every piece I create. My mission is to spark joy and thought through stories, whether I’m covering quirky food trends, diving into self-care routines, or unpacking the beauty of human connections. From articles on sustainable living to heartfelt takes on modern relationships, I love adding a warm, relatable voice to my work. Outside of writing, I’m probably hunting for vintage treasures, enjoying a glass of red wine, or hiking with my dog under the open sky.

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