Childfree Woman Refuses To Take Responsibility For Her Sister’s New Baby She Told Her Not To Have
Helping out family members in need is an important part of, well, being a family in the first place. However, sometimes it can be hard to see where normal requests end and unreasonable expectations begin. The truth is that sometimes one’s close relatives make poor decisions and then need others to step in.
A woman asked the internet for advice when her family started to pressure her and her husband, both childless by choice, to adopt her sister’s third child. Her sister had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, but insisted on going through with the pregnancy, but, seemingly out of nowhere, her boyfriend of six months cheated on her and left.
Dealing with Alzheimer’s in the family is generally tragic
Image credits: Getty Images / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
But one woman was unsure of what to do when her family wanted her to adopt her sick sister’s baby
Image credits: Curated Lifestyle / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
Image credits: anon
There is no getting around the fact that Alzheimer’s is a horrible disease
Early-onset Alzheimer’s at forty is devastating in ways that are difficult to fully comprehend. The disease affects people in their thirties and forties, often when they have families and careers, fundamentally upending life during what should be peak productive years. The condition progresses more aggressively than late-onset Alzheimer’s, with faster overall deterioration and longer disease duration. For the sister in this story, the diagnosis meant losing her job, becoming dependent on alimony and child support, and facing a terrifying future where her cognitive abilities would progressively decline while her children still needed her.
Understanding this context makes the pregnancy decision even more complicated. The sister wasn’t being reckless in some abstract way, she was watching her future disappear and grasping for something hopeful. A new relationship, a new baby, a chance to experience motherhood one more time before the disease took that capacity away. It’s heartbreaking and human and also profoundly unfair to everyone else who will bear the consequences of that choice.
What commenters struggled with was parsing where compassion should override judgment. The sister made a decision that virtually everyone in her life warned against. She believed her boyfriend would step up, that her existing children were excited, that love would somehow be enough. All of those beliefs proved wrong, and now an infant is about to be born into a situation with no clear path forward. The woman telling this story is angry because she saw this coming, said so explicitly, and is now being pressured to sacrifice her childfree life to fix a problem she had no part in creating.
It’s hard enough on the two kids already
Research on family caregiving shows that Alzheimer’s, understandably, creates enormous strain on family systems, with caregivers experiencing high rates of depression, anxiety, and physical health problems. The sister’s existing children are already facing the reality of watching their mother decline. Adding an infant sibling to that equation doesn’t just impact the sister, it fundamentally alters these children’s lives. They’re twelve and six, old enough to understand what’s happening but too young to consent to becoming de facto parents to a baby when their mother can no longer provide care.
What makes family pressure particularly insidious in situations like this is how it weaponizes love and obligation. The implied message to the childfree couple is that if they really cared about the sister, if they were really good family members, they would step up. But this framing ignores that the couple has built a life based on their own values and choices. Being childfree isn’t a temporary preference that can be abandoned when family needs arise, it’s often a fundamental decision about how to live. Asking them to take on an infant is asking them to dismantle their entire life structure.
The ex-husband’s position is also worth examining. He said he can’t take the baby because he already has to care for their two existing children. This is completely reasonable. He divorced the sister, he’s building a new life, and his obligation is to the children he chose to have. Yet commenters were quick to judge him harshly, as if divorce means forfeiting the right to boundaries. The reality is that he’s already going to be managing the emotional and practical fallout of his children’s mother developing severe dementia. That’s an enormous burden even without adding an infant to the equation.
Sometimes there are no perfect solutions
What this story really reveals is the impossible mathematics of catastrophic illness in families. Someone has to absorb the impact, and there’s no formula for determining who that should be. The sister made choices that expanded the circle of people who will suffer consequences. The boyfriend who promised to step up proved worthless. The existing children will carry trauma from watching their mother disappear while potentially being “parentified” to care for a sibling. And the extended family is left scrambling to find solutions that don’t destroy anyone else’s life in the process.
The woman’s anger is entirely justified, and so is her exhaustion. She’s been watching this unfold in slow motion, unable to prevent it, and now she’s being asked to be the solution. But her anger doesn’t solve the fundamental problem: a baby is about to be born who needs care, and a woman with Alzheimer’s will soon be unable to provide it. Being right about predicting this disaster doesn’t make it any less of a disaster, and it doesn’t answer the question of what happens next.
The real lesson isn’t about whether the woman should take the baby or whether her sister was wrong to get pregnant. It’s about the brutal reality that families facing catastrophic illness often have to make choices where every option causes harm, and loving someone doesn’t obligate you to destroy your own life to save theirs. The woman can love her sister, grieve for what’s happening to her, and still refuse to take on a responsibility she never agreed to. Those things can all be true simultaneously, and the fact that it feels impossible doesn’t mean she’s wrong for setting boundaries. Sometimes the only way to survive your family’s crisis is to accept that you can’t fix it, even when everyone is looking at you to try.
Some folks needed more info
Most readers thought the woman was being pushed into an uncomfortable position
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
So the sister who had no job, no income, 2 kids and Alzheimer chose to have a third baby and is now making it other people's responsibility ? Now I'm all for keeping people's rights to do what they want with their body, but that was not a responsible choice of her to have/keep this baby at all. OP has every rights to be mad that it's being pushed on her.
Lack of Inhibition, especially s****l inhibition is symptom of Alzheimer's, even in the early stages. So try not to be too angry at sis. However, that doesn't mean it's on OP. It borders on malpractice that her doctors didn't include permanent or semi permanent birth control in her treatment (coil, implant, tubal ligation). It is a normal aspect of early dementia treatment. Hopefully that will be addressed soon. But she's not a fit parent and won't be. The child's best option is adoption
I'm guessing you meant lack of inhibition otherwise it doesn't make sense.
Load More Replies...I could be wrong but I think early onset alzheimer's is one of the ones that can have genetic predisposition, sister's kids really should be checked if they're going to end up with it as well.
You are correct. Early-onset Alzheimer's disease has a very strong genetic component and is heritable. She didn't know when she had her older children, of course, but she deliberately got pregnant and gestated a third child that will be born at an incredibly high risk of developing early-onset Alzheimer's disease themselves. Absolutely abhorrently selfish of the sister.
Load More Replies...So the sister who had no job, no income, 2 kids and Alzheimer chose to have a third baby and is now making it other people's responsibility ? Now I'm all for keeping people's rights to do what they want with their body, but that was not a responsible choice of her to have/keep this baby at all. OP has every rights to be mad that it's being pushed on her.
Lack of Inhibition, especially s****l inhibition is symptom of Alzheimer's, even in the early stages. So try not to be too angry at sis. However, that doesn't mean it's on OP. It borders on malpractice that her doctors didn't include permanent or semi permanent birth control in her treatment (coil, implant, tubal ligation). It is a normal aspect of early dementia treatment. Hopefully that will be addressed soon. But she's not a fit parent and won't be. The child's best option is adoption
I'm guessing you meant lack of inhibition otherwise it doesn't make sense.
Load More Replies...I could be wrong but I think early onset alzheimer's is one of the ones that can have genetic predisposition, sister's kids really should be checked if they're going to end up with it as well.
You are correct. Early-onset Alzheimer's disease has a very strong genetic component and is heritable. She didn't know when she had her older children, of course, but she deliberately got pregnant and gestated a third child that will be born at an incredibly high risk of developing early-onset Alzheimer's disease themselves. Absolutely abhorrently selfish of the sister.
Load More Replies...









































33
28