Such cruel comments.
Why would you attack a young woman who has sadly felt lost in her family.
Many young people who have a sibling with special needs, feel this way. Parents are torn because of a situation they cannot change.
I am a retired nurse and playworker.
I found there was often no help, or consistent advice from health workers, or other disciplines.Parents need information about family dynamics and siblings need to be seen. This woman has shared
Openly. She does not need to be abused. Maybe you could just say thank you for your experiences. You mentioned sibling's plural, that meant lot's of support to go around.
Not everyone has this blessing.
I think congratulations for completing your degree and your bravery in sharing 👏
10 Moments That Prove Quiet Kindness Can Even Heal Broken Sibling Bonds

Siblings are supposed to be forever. But sometimes the gap between them grows too wide for words. These moments prove that quiet compassion, love, and forgiveness can reach where nothing else could. Empathy is still the answer. Family is still the light.
I hated my severely autistic sister. Needs 24/7 care. Mom and Dad always chose her. At my graduation party, they bailed, “She had a seizure. We can’t let her die for your party.” As soon as it was over, I stormed to the hospital, grabbed her arm, and she looked at me. Pale. Tubes everywhere. I was shaking. Twenty years of invisibility. My graduation is gone. I started yelling. Everything I’d held in for twenty years. “You stole everything. My room. My toys. My parents. My graduation. Everything.” She stared at me. She always stares. Doesn’t react. Doesn’t understand. But then she reached under her pillow. Pulled something out. A piece of paper. Folded four times. She held it out to me. I took it. Hands still shaking. I unfolded it. A drawing. Stick figures. Crayon. The kind she makes a hundred of. But in the corner, in my mother’s handwriting—because my sister can’t write—were three words. “We saw you.”
I looked at my mom. She was in the doorway. Crying. “She watched your livestream on my phone. The whole ceremony. She made that during it. She wanted to give it to you herself.” My sister was still holding her hand out. Waiting for me to take the drawing back. I sat down on the hospital floor. Still in my graduation gown. And I cried harder than I’ve cried in twenty years. She put her head on my shoulder. She’s taken everything from me, my whole life. Except this moment. This one she gave back.
What a selfish unkind brat of a sibling you are. Your sister has severe autism on top of having had a seizure and you still went in there playing the victim. She deserves a better sibling. I have autism and there are a lot of things I need extra help with but my sister's have always been my cheerleaders. Your a disgrace.
What kind of a foolish and selfish sibling are you?
I have an autistic brother. He can't speak, read or write.
Physically there are no issues but he needs 24/7 care.
I can fight the world for him but not with him for anything.
I keep fighting with my parents that they need to give him more attention and they could have cured him early.
We are still on the journey of curing him but I want him to see the world with his eyes. Understand things with his own mind and hence the fight.
I can k*ll anybody who would dare raise a finger on him
And you're crying for your moments?
I am 29.. soon to be 30. Yes sometimes I feel low thinking I'm losing out on life but when I look back.. I'm an MBA working in an IT company .
What has my brother achieved till now?
He started speaking before me. He is much intelligent than me and what did he get?
And he is younger to me
Whenever I see such negligent siblings of special needs child, my blood begin to boil.
You should find ways of curing your sister and look at your achievements. Look at where are you and where she is.
My brother gets seizures too. .
I may have crores of complaints with my parents but not even one with my brother. He is my baby brother!
You need to do a lot of improvement.
And yes you can say you didn't sign up for this.
Agreed. But God forbid if your child has the same condition like your sister.. would you have abandoned them?
I lost my mother three years ago. She had dedicated her life to her son and now I'm the second mother of my brother. I can never leave him and it's my choice.
Now you have achieved whatever you wanted. You will achieve more. But put efforts in making your sister included and for her to come equal to you.
Great brother you are
Sometimes we realise latter.
So thankful not related to you in any way. What a miserable, heartles person you are.
She is just a child who needs love a care of her parents
You are heartless. Your sister nor your parents asked for her to be severely autistic not did any of them ask for her to have seizures. Grow the F up.
She is a still a child, what are you talking about
My brother was mainly handicap too, and he broke my toys and got all the attention and everything else and going up with him and holding his hand while he died made my life so much more richer. I’m sorry for what you experienced and how you felt excluded, but I found the relationship with my mentally handicap brother to be one of the best things that ever happened to me in my life.
God bless
It's extremely hard to have a special needs sibling, you are invisible and in the way, I don't believe a drawing changed that, it's a lifetime of not being seen or acknowledge
Agree
WHETHER IT IS A "GOLDEN" CHILD OR AN ILL CHILD, THE ONES THAT ARE TREATED THE WORST ARE THE ONES THAT HAVE NO SAY SO. YOU CAN'T EXPECT A SIBLING TO ACCEPT BEING SHOVED ASIDE, FOR EVERYTHING. IT IS NOT THIER FAULT FOR A SIBLINGS ILLNESS. PARENTS RUIN MORE LIVES BY TREATING THE "HEALTHY" CHILD LIKE THEY DON'T EXIST. YOU CAN'T BLAME OP FOR LOSING IT. IT SEEMS LIKE NO ONE CONSIDERED OP, EVER, ONCE THE SISTER ARRIVED. NO ONE MADE ANY ATTEMPT AT INCLUDING THEM, UNLESS IT BENEFITTED THE SISTER. OP WAS NOT SELFISH, JUST WORN DOWN BY THE CIRCUMSTANCES.
STILL NOT OP'S FAULT.
My sister and I didn’t speak for three years. It started after my wife and I lost our twins during the second trimester. We had already named them Leo and Maya.
Soon after, my sister began “doctor shopping” to get a prescription for the medication that helps treat infertility, even though she didn’t have fertility issues. As it turned out, she wanted twins of her own. She got pregnant and, when they were born, she gave them the exact names we had chosen for our lost babies. I cut her off completely.
Last month, a package arrived from her. It was a handmade memorial book filled with the photos and ultrasounds of our twins that she had saved.
At the back was a legal document. She had officially changed her children’s names. Her ability to finally understand what she had done helped us start to overcome the past.
When I was about seven, my older brother and sister convinced me I was adopted. I looked nothing like them—they were both tall with dark hair, while I was short and blonde. Their “prank” was so persistent that I stopped believing my mom when she tried to assure me I was her biological child. For years, I felt like an outsider in my own home.
During our family reunion last summer, my siblings sat me down and handed me a large envelope. Inside was a professional DNA kit they had already paid for, along with a detailed family tree they had spent months researching. They had tracked down photos of our great-grandmother, who I had never seen before. She was my spitting image—short, blonde, and with the exact same smile.
They admitted they had been cruel kids and had spent the last year gathering these records to prove, once and for all, exactly where I fit in. Seeing my face in our ancestors’ photos changed everything for me.
Nah it feels a bit overblown to me. This is just a classic siblings prank! I’m the youngest. By the time I was born, my parents weren't really taking many family photos anymore so my siblings used my lack of childhood photos as so-called proof that I was adopted. I used to cry about it when I was like 5 or 6 but I quickly grew out of it and no offense taken. What kind of sibling relationship doesn’t include pranking each other when we were kids? My older siblings pranked each other way worse than this 🤣🤣
My sister and I were at a restaurant the night before our grandmother’s funeral. As we walked in, a man asked if we were sisters. I told him we were, and he mentioned how much we looked alike. Once we got to our table, she turned to me and said, “I’ve never felt so insulted.” That one sentence stayed with me for years. We didn’t speak much after that.
A few years later, my sister went through a really difficult divorce and lost her job in the same month. She was isolated and struggling. Even though I was still hurt by her words, I started dropping off groceries on her porch twice a week. I never knocked or waited for a thank you; I just left her favorite meals and small things I knew she needed. I just wanted her to be okay.
One evening, she finally called me. She was crying. She apologized and said she had spent years trying to be “the pretty one” because she didn’t think she had anything else to offer the world.
My brother and I stopped speaking over a stupid argument about our childhood home. We didn’t trade a word for four years. Last month, my car broke down on a rural highway at 2 AM. I didn’t call him, but I posted a photo of the tow truck on my story. An hour later, a rental car pulled up. The driver said it was already paid for for a week. I found out my brother saw the post, called every rental agency near my GPS tag, and used his loyalty points to make sure I wasn’t stranded. He didn’t even text to say it was him.
Your brother still loves you !
My brother went missing for 3 days. We were frantic. Then, a neighbor visited my mother to say rumors were spreading that he had died in an accident. My mother was an absolute mess, inconsolable and shaking with grief. I spent hours calling everyone he knew until I finally got him on the phone. He wasn’t hurt; he had purposely started the rumor just to see what would happen. When I told him how much he’d traumatized our mother, he just laughed and said, “Oh, it worked then. I thought it’d be funny.” I didn’t speak to him for a decade after that.
Years later, I was the one who got a call—this time, it was my brother. He had been diagnosed with a severe heart condition and was facing a dangerous surgery alone. I could have ignored him, but instead, I simply took over his house payments, stocked his fridge, and sat in the waiting room for twelve hours during his operation. I acted like the brother he didn’t deserve.
When he finally woke up and saw me there, he reached out and held my hand. He told me that for years, he had lived with the weight of that “joke.” That moment of shared silence was the first time I felt he truly saw the pain he’d caused, allowing us to finally move forward.
I’ve just got a new job. I was doing well and felt secure. One evening, my sister invited me over for dinner. Among other things, she casually asked who my boss was and if I liked the new environment. The next day, I got a call from my boss: “Come to my office. NOW.”
Turns out my sister had called and claimed I had a history of workplace theft. I was fired on the spot. I didn’t speak to her for a long time after that.
Years later, my sister’s daughter was struggling to find her first professional role. Instead of retaliating, I quietly used my own connections to land my niece a great position. I didn’t tell my sister; I just wanted to make sure my niece didn’t suffer for her mother’s past.
When my niece got the job and told her mom how I had helped, my sister finally broke down. She called me to explain why she had been so desperate to keep me “beneath” her. This helped my anger fade. Things aren’t the same anyway, but at least we talk to each other.
I dont understand some of these for your relatives to be selfish and un kind 😕
My older sister had given up a full scholarship in her youth to raise her family. Once her son grew up, she bravely decided to start college in her mid-forties. During a casual conversation, I pointed out that she’d be 48 by the time she finished and claimed no one would hire a recent graduate that age. I didn’t mean to be cruel; I just failed to filter my thoughts.
She quit school the following week. Four years later, her husband suffered a heart attack and could no longer work. Now, she works three grueling, low-paying jobs just to support them and cover the mounting medical bills. Watching her struggle is a heavy burden to carry.
I feel my responsibility for her situation deeply, so every month I send them enough money to cover their mortgage and healthcare costs. I just want her to know that I recognize the value of the career she lost because of my thoughtless words.
My brother was always my role model, the person I worshipped growing up. Thirteen years ago, three weeks before my wedding, I arrived early to our rehearsal venue and caught him cheating with my fiancée. The betrayal was unbearable. I called off the wedding and severed ties with him for over a decade. I eventually moved on, married a wonderful woman, and had two children.
Recently, my brother was diagnosed with a terminal illness. He tried to talk to me through my parents, but I refused. Then he showed up at my door, fell to his knees, and begged for my forgiveness. I told him I needed time. I went to my parents’ house, where he was in hospice, and told him I forgave him. We wept and hugged.
I’ve spent his final days staying by his side, bathing him, and talking with him. Seeing him so vulnerable changed everything. My ability to show him grace in his final hour allowed him to finally find peace with his past. He told me that being able to forgive me for my years of silence and himself for his mistakes was the only thing that let him let go.

Last year, I had a miscarriage at 14 weeks. I called my sister. We were always super close, so I turned to her for the support I desperately needed. Instead, she snapped, “You always got what you wanted, maybe this is just the universe balancing things out.” I blocked her right away.
On the due date, when my baby was supposed to be born, my doorbell rang. My sister was standing on the porch holding a single white flower and my baby’s first ultrasound photo. She said, “I just didn’t want you to be alone today.” We both cried. Through tears, she told me she’d found out she couldn’t have children—that very day I called her. So when I said I lost the baby, something in her broke. “I was so ashamed of what I felt,” she said.
What healed these sibling bonds wasn’t time. It was one quiet act that said: I still see you. Some people only ever get that kindness and compassion from a stranger. These are their stories: 10 Times Compassion Left a Permanent Mark on a Lost Soul’s Heart
Comments
My adopted sister bought me several fidget toys when my anxiety was at it's worse. she's kept every coloring page, diamond art, and poem I've written for her. I found them 2 weeks ago. Ive never been so loved.
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