Just because your child turns 18, becomes an adult does NOT mean that is it, you're no longer a parent. And if you think it is and kick your child to a curb then don't have children. Parents like these blow my mind. And wow, the audacity of her mother calling her because she needs help with her baby? What a b*tch. She should not have more children. "Family helps family" hypocrisy at its finest. If April ever sees this, don't feel guilty for not wanting to help her cause she certainly didn't feel guilty when she kicked you out leaving you homeless and to find for yourself. If she needs help bad enough, then she can hire a nanny. I feel for this baby though, cause when he or she turns 18, your mother is going to do the exact same thing she did to you.
I Refuse to Help My Parents Who Abandoned Me at 18

Being cut off by your own parents can leave scars that last well into adulthood. And when the people who once abandoned you suddenly reappear with expectations, it can force a painful reckoning. One Bright Side reader, April (26, F), shared how a single phone call reopened everything she thought she had healed.
Here’s her letter:
Dear Bright Side,
The day I turned 18, my parents kicked me out of the family home. There was no warning. One day, I was a teenager with parents. The next, I was standing outside with a suitcase and a slammed door behind me.
No safety net. No backup plan. No explanation. I slept on friends’ couches, skipped meals, and worked two jobs while trying to stay in school.
I cried myself to sleep more nights than I can count. Every day felt like survival mode.
I was forced to survive for eight years.
For eight years, there was silence. No calls. No birthdays. No holidays.
At first, I hoped they’d reach out. Then I waited. Then I stopped expecting anything at all. Eventually, I learned how to live without them.
It wasn’t easy, but I built a life on my own terms. I stopped needing their approval. I stopped hoping for an apology.
I finally got the call I had wanted.

HOW old is your mother? If you are 26, she either had you very young, in order for her to even consider having another child, now, or she is planning on YOU being the defacto mother. It is not your future sibling's fault, that your parents are horrible people, but it is NOT your responsibility, to care for their child. Don't move into "their" house, because it certainly isn't home. They WILL kick you out again, as soon as they get all they can from you. It sounds, to me, like they are having another child, because they know, that you, will NOT be taking care of them, in there old age. DON'T DO IT.
One afternoon, my phone lit up with my mom’s name. I almost didn’t answer. When I did, she sounded cheerful, like nothing had ever happened. Like we’d spoken yesterday.
“We need to talk to you about something important,” she said. “Your father and I have news.” Then she told me she was pregnant.
But that wasn’t the most shocking part.
She talked about how unexpected it was. How tired she felt. How my dad was picking up extra shifts. How hard everything suddenly was.
Then her tone shifted. She said they needed me to move back home. To help around the house during the pregnancy. To support them. And later, to babysit once the baby arrived.
I listened in silence as she said “family helps family”.
I finally asked the question I’d carried for years.
After everything she said, I asked the one thing that had been burning in me since I was 18. “Where was my family when you threw me out with nothing?”
She sighed like I was being dramatic. “That was different,” she said. “You were grown. This is a baby.”
In that moment, everything became clear.
I realized I wasn’t being called because they missed me. I was being called because they needed me.
The years I struggled alone didn’t matter. The nights I went hungry didn’t matter. The silence didn’t matter. They would have never called me if they didn’t need me.
Now I’m left with a decision I never asked for.
Part of me feels angry. Part of me feels sad. And part of me feels numb. I built my life without them. I learned how to survive without support.
And now I’m being asked to show up for the very people who never showed up for me. I don’t know what I owe them—if anything. But I don’t have any other family. What should I do?
April
Dear April,
Thank you for sharing this tough story with us. While we can’t make your decision for you, here are some things to keep in mind while you consider your options:
- Being an adult doesn’t erase the need for care: You don’t stop being a parent just because your child turned 18. Support matters at every age, especially when it’s taken away without warning.
- Abandonment isn’t the same as estrangement: Being forced out suddenly breaks basic trust and safety. Time alone doesn’t heal that kind of loss unless it’s acknowledged.
- It’s okay to question relationships built on need, not care: When contact only happens during someone else’s crisis, it’s worth asking what role you’re truly being offered.
Family dynamics can often cause tension and unresolved wounds. When this happens, it can be tough to buy into the idea of happy families. Here’s another story from one of our readers who refused to leave an inheritance to a family that treated her like a cash cow.
Comments
If you don't have any other family, then you don't have ANY family. Those people are NOT your parents, and never were, and I'm sure they will be fail to be parents for their new child as well. Block their number, cut off all contact, and hope that the child get's removed before suffering your fate and in time to wind up with a decent family, hopefully with no memory of its birth failures. If you know the approximate birth date, you might want to call DCFS on them after about a month.
I sm so sorry, April, but they are not your family. Sharing the same genetics can mean nothing more beyond that- sharing the same genetics. It hurts and deep down you keep hoping they will really love you. Even though you know they never will. Their callous, horrific,and outrageous audacity takes ones breath a way. I do the "what if" exercise when I feel like I am in a terrible emotional quagmire. I think, what if a close friend came to me with exact same problem - what would I tell her? Would I tell her go back to her abusive family? I think you and I would urge her not to go back. Your parenrs are abusers. If you can't bring yourself to tell them no in person. Send an email or a certified letter-keep it short- tell them no, and do not bother going in depth about their egregiously vile behaviors or asking for their remorse. Block them, change your phone number- etc. Then allow yourself time to mourn and grieve- knowing you will not get a loving relationship wi
with these people- that you have been hoping to get for years. This is the loss for you. A
,and it is okay to feel grief and anger. If necessary, you can hire a lawyer for not too much $$ to write them and instruct them to never contact you again.
Another "what if"- if you had a child, would you let your parents take care of her,?
And finally, you can have the most supportive and loving family who are not related to you. Talking to a good therapist can help you process all of this. You are clearly a strong and smart person. You can get through this.
I would move back home, help them until the baby is born then call child services & don't do anything further
What if they do the same to the baby when he/she grows up. :(
Tell her if she's too tired already than she's too old for a baby. Tell her to either abort or give the child up for adoption. Tell her, and be very firm on this, that you're not helping in anyway. She and your father are two grown adults and should have known better. Tell her that they got themselves in this mess now they can figure it out on their own without you.
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