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Relatives Rejected His Adoption Offer, Then Got Angry When He Refused A Troubled Teen

by Layla Bui
January 12, 2026
in Social Issues

Good intentions do not always lead to good outcomes, especially when money, family, and children are involved. Sometimes, even the most generous gestures can be misunderstood and leave behind resentment that never quite disappears.

The OP shared how a visit to extended family abroad led him and his wife to consider adopting a relative’s baby, hoping to give the child a more stable future. What he did not expect was the intense backlash that followed, with relatives accusing him of overstepping and ulterior motives.

Over a decade later, that same child is now facing serious behavioral problems, and the family is once again looking to the OP for help. This time, though, he is far less willing. Is he wrong for saying no now? Keep reading to see what readers had to say.

A man who once offered to adopt a struggling cousin’s baby is asked again years later, under very different circumstances

Relatives Rejected His Adoption Offer, Then Got Angry When He Refused A Troubled Teen
not the actual photo

AITA for going back on an offer to adopt my cousin?

I was visiting family in South America 13 years ago. I met one of my cousin's kids for the first time.

The young woman had just had her third kid and had been left by her boyfriend. He was the father of only the latest kid.

She looked so worn down and sad. When I got back home,

I spoke with my wife and she agreed that if his family was okay with it we would adopt her youngest kid.

It was an offer, not a demand. And we made sure to explain that we would help her out monetarily with the other two as well.

I was adopted in a similar manner so I have always felt a desire to pay it forward.

My adoptive parents are also related to my biological parents and they helped them with money too.

Well, it became a huge deal. I was trying to steal a kid just because I had money and blah blah blah.

So I said no problem and walked away from the offer.

Well that baby is 13 now and his mother has had two more kids.

She is being supported by her mom but not doing great. Her two eldest kids are working and going to school

but the 13-year-old is a bit of a jerk I guess. Skipping school and hanging out with the wrong people.

My family contacted me to see if I were still willing to help him out by bringing him up here. I passed.

There is a big difference between a baby and a 13-year-old troublemaker.

Plus I'm 50 now and I don't really have the energy to deal with that s__t.. So I declined.

My family down there are shitting on me for going back on my offer.

So I offered to pay all of his expenses down there if any of them would take him in.

Nobody thought that was a good deal.

I feel bad for the kid. I have a fairly good idea how his life is going to go.

I just don't think that I'm the person to fix this problem. AITA?

Most of us recognize the instinct to step in when we see a child struggling. There’s a particular ache that comes from witnessing youth weighed down by hardship, and an equally powerful urge to lighten that load if we can.

When someone offers help, whether emotional, financial, or parental, it often reflects deep care shaped by personal history and values. That’s why the original offer in this story resonated so strongly with so many: it wasn’t impulsive or transactional, but rooted in compassion, lived experience, and a genuine desire to “pay it forward.”

At the heart of this dilemma are conflicting emotions and expectations. Initially, the offer to adopt a newborn was motivated by empathy and reinforced by the OP’s personal history of being adopted by relatives.

But that offer, once public and sensationalized, became entangled with family judgment and cultural assumptions about wealth, obligation, and “rescuing” someone.

As the child grew older and became a troubled teen, the emotional landscape shifted: what once seemed like a simple act of kindness now looked, to OP, like a lifelong responsibility he might not be equipped to fulfill. That complexity, wanting to help, yet also recognizing personal limits, is far more human than many responses give credit for.

To understand this dynamic more deeply, adoption experts emphasize that adoption isn’t just a good deed; it’s a long, relational process.

According to a Psychology Today overview, adoption has profound psychological implications for everyone involved: adoptees may feel grief, identity questions, and ambivalence about their past, and adoptive parents shoulder emotional and logistical challenges for years or decades.

This resource also points out that adoption is neither universally positive nor negative; rather, outcomes depend on the individual histories, environment, and ongoing support of everyone involved.

Applying that insight here highlights why OP’s hesitation isn’t simply about “backing out.” Helping a baby in crisis is very different from parenting a teenager with behavioral struggles.

Teenagers, especially those who may have experienced instability or loss, often need unwavering emotional investment, trauma-informed care, and patience that goes far beyond financial support.

A 13-year-old with school and peer issues is not the same as a newborn who has just entered the world; the developmental, psychological, and relational commitments are on different scales entirely.

This doesn’t mean OP is heartless; it means he’s human. Recognizing one’s limits doesn’t absolve someone of empathy; rather, it allows for realistic care that doesn’t lead to burnout or resentment.

A reflective approach could be encouraging family members to seek community resources, mentoring programs, or therapeutic support for this teen, while offering emotional or financial contributions without absorbing full parental responsibility.

What feels like a refusal might instead be a call to share the burden more sustainably, an invitation for the whole family to step up together.

Life isn’t about perfect choices; it’s about honest ones. Accepting that compassion comes in many forms, not just adoption, can spark a more nuanced discussion about responsibility, boundaries, and what it truly means to support someone who’s struggling.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

This group agreed the offer was rejected long ago and no longer exists

Ok-Climate553 − NTA, they declined and now that the kid is problematic, they want you to take their child at 13 years old!

Away from his family? Wow they are honestly some messed-up parents

JudgeJudAITA − You didn’t go back on your offer. They rejected your offer.

That was the end of the offer, by their choice.

Offering to pay expenses is far more than most people would do in this situation. NTA

alv269 − NTA. That offer was 13 years ago and was declined by them.

You didn't go back on any offer. There is a huge difference between a baby and a teenager.

Aggressive_Cup8452 − Nope. NtA. No offer lasts 13 year.

Adopting a baby is very different compared to adopting a teen. Even a well-behaved teen.

CivilAsAnOrang − NTA. What “offer” did you go back on? You offered, they rejected it.

What happened is they made a new offer and you are not interested in it.

Funny how it’s ok for them, but not you, isn’t it?

Dontbither − Nta. You made a generous offer to adopt a baby. Your offer was rejected.

You owe the nothing. Move on.

Material-Profit5923 − If an employer offered them a job ad they turned it down,

do they think that 10 years later the job is still sitting open waiting for them?

Of course not. A proposal was made and declined. That opening was closed. NTA.

This group stressed the massive difference between adopting a baby and a troubled teen

Runs13point1s − NTA. Adopting a baby to raise in your family is far more different than being the financial benefactor

of a teenage troublemaker. What are they thinking that because they declined and you missed out on first steps and words,

you’d really be ok with other firsts like, first arrest, first fingerprints and first mug shots? Naw. Hard pass.

Kcollar59 − NTA The same family that criticized you of trying to “steal” a baby is now asking you to take him in?

No. Had you brought him up, he’d have had your family values imprinted on him,

as well as the stable environment you offered. He _might_ not be having the same behavioral issues.

Instead, he grew up with a single mother who was already “worn down and sad” who added two more kids to the mix.

You owe them nothing. You owe _him_ nothing (especially she had 2 other kids who may go the way he is.

Would you expect the same for them? ) You’re not a social services agency. They made their bed, so…

Content-Plenty-268 − NTA. You offered to adopt a baby.

They shitted all over you, and now they continue because you don't want a 13-year-old troublemaker.

Your family is quite a bunch of AHs.

This group called out the family’s hypocrisy and refusal to step up for themselves

dwells2301 − NTA So I offered to pay all of his expenses down there if any of them would take him in.

Nobody thought that was a good deal Of course they didn't. It's much easier to say someone else should do it.

[Reddit User] − NTA. The mental gymnastics your family plays when convenient is astounding. Stay firm.

Do you think the original offer should still “count” after all these years, or was it fair for him to say no to parenting a teen he never raised? Share your hot takes below!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 8/8 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/8 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/8 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/8 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/8 votes | 0%

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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