AITA for rejecting my mom and refusing to forgive her and telling her she chose to be there for her affair partner's kids over her own so she needs to deal with it now?

Livid-Molasses4926 2015 comments

Betrayal tore through the fragile fabric of a once close-knit family, leaving a 16-year-old boy and his younger brother grappling with the harsh reality of their mother's in***elity.

What stung the most was not just the secret affair, but the slow erosion of love and attention—the missed swim meets, the abandoned traditions, the unanswered calls—that shattered the trust they had in her unwavering presence. As the truth unraveled, so did the safety net that had held their childhood together.

Their father, burdened with the weight of disappointment, bore the brunt of her neglect, while the brothers were left to navigate the painful void left by a mother who chose deception over devotion.

The story is one of heartbreak, confusion, and the desperate search for fairness amidst a family torn apart.

AITA for rejecting my mom and refusing to forgive her and telling her she chose to be there for her affair partner's kids over her own so she needs to deal with it now?
‘AITA for rejecting my mom and refusing to forgive her and telling her she chose to be there for her affair partner's kids over her own so she needs to deal with it now?’

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Users Wasted No Time Telling It Like It Is:

Support, sarcasm, and strong words — the replies covered it all. This one definitely got people talking.

The original poster (OP) is dealing with intense, justified anger stemming from his mother's long-term emotional abandonment and in***elity, specifically noting that she prioritized the children of her affair partner over her own sons.

The central conflict lies between the OP's deeply felt need for accountability and emotional space, and his mother's—and ther***st's—insistence on immediate forgiveness and reconciliation for the sake of maintaining a relationship.

Is the OP unfair for maintaining rigid boundaries and expressing justified resentment toward a mother who actively chose to neglect her parental duties for an affair, or is the pressure from the mother and ther***st to forgive immediately more damaging than allowing the OP to process his betrayal on his own timeline?