I'm 71. Still healing from self esteem issues from childhood . As an adult I moved in & took care of parents tol death. My mother did not do legal diligence, leaving her estate to fall into receivership. It was a pattern. The things I loved she would destroy or get rid of. It was deliberate. I'm glad about one thing. After 60 yrs of addiction ,my dad got sober & made amends as much as he could. That began my healing. She never forgave the years she put up with his struggle. What seemed to free him was continuing to offer amends, whether she rebuffed was on her. Idk if Mom ever loved us, I felt like furniture.
My Parents Mocked Me for Being Childfree—Now They’re Living the Irony

Families love talking about children and “unconditional love” until you say you’re childfree. After his parents disowned him for not wanting children, our reader went no contact for ten years. Now they’re back, asking the “disappointment” they cut off for help. And yes, there’s an unexpected twist.
My parents disowned me for refusing to have kids. “You’ll die alone with no one to take care of you,” they yelled. They left everything to my brother. We had no contact for 10 years.
Yesterday, they suddenly called, crying. My brother had taken their money, dumped them in a cheap nursing home, and vanished. They begged to live with me. I refused and hung up.
This morning, someone knocked on my door. It was a woman I didn’t recognize. She said, “I’m the social worker assigned to your parents. They listed you as their emergency contact.”
I told her I needed time to think. Now I’m sitting here with her card, wondering what to do. The irony isn’t lost on me: the kid who would “die alone” is their only hope, while the golden child they left everything to robbed them and disappeared.
Do I help them after everything they did? Am I terrible for considering walking away? Bright Side, what would you do?
— Marcus

The golden child is a poor excuse for a human being. Don't stoop to their level show kindness and help them out and you will be blessed for it.
Forgive them & help. Don't stoop to their level. Jesus said to forgive. Trust me, you'll feel better. Hate, anger & meanness wastes energy & ages you. A clear conscience is better. You'll sleep very good. They'll be the ones feeling ashamed & guilty. Blessings 🙏🌹☺️🙃🤭👍🌄
There’s nothing to think about. They disowned you. You don’t owe them anything. You should’ve given that social worker back her business card immediately after she handed to you and told your parents disowned you a decade ago when they didn’t need you and they should’ve considered possible ramifications of that decision before they tried to bully into something as significantly life changing and long term as being a parent.
Actions have consequences, never be second best to anyone. They disowned.
They are your parents. God used them to bring you to the world. Have they never done anything for you? Fed you, clothed you, educated you? So they acted foolishly, are you perfect? You can't forgive them? That would mean you never loved them. Be there for them, if you can let them move in with you. If you can't just visit them and reconnect. You life will be better
They disowned you. Let thieving brother be emergency contact. They don't want a relationship they want a rescue perhaps. You can forgive what they did but never forget it. You BY THEIR CHOICE have no official relationship with them.
RUN!!! AS FAST AS YOU CAN!
"You'll die alone!"
"You first."
Problem solved. I guess someone should have told them that thing about reaping what you've sown.
Thanks for sharing this story with us! While we can’t undo what happened, we’ve put together some advice for you and for anyone facing this kind of heartbreaking decision.
- Set boundaries before any decision. Don’t let guilt or pressure rush you into anything. You’re allowed to help on your terms, not theirs. That might mean arranging care without personal contact, or it might mean nothing at all. Either way, decide what you can live with long-term, not what feels right in the moment.
- Offer a one-time settlement with conditions. If you have the means and want some closure, consider offering a single lump sum to help them get into a better facility, with the explicit condition that this is the only help they’ll ever receive and all future contact ends permanently. Get it in writing. It’s not about them deserving it; it’s about buying your peace of mind and closing this chapter for good.

Mom experienced consequences. I got to travel & enjoy my dad's last 15 yrs. I just let go of holding resentment for the "lost" years. Mom was even angry at Dad's funeral, refused to participate military honor rites & told his sister all she remembered was bitterness. My aunt sat behind her in shock.
- Let them experience the consequences fully. Sometimes the kindest thing is letting people sit with what they’ve created. They chose favoritism, conditional love, and cruelty—and their golden child destroyed them for it. You stepping in now might actually rob them of the only chance they have to genuinely understand what they did. Walking away isn’t revenge; it’s allowing natural consequences to teach what you never could.
- Consider what you’d tell your future self. Ten years from now or when they’re gone, which decision will you respect yourself for? Not one that will make you feel guilty or virtuous right now, but one that aligns with who you actually want to be.
Some people genuinely feel better walking away. Others need to help in small ways to avoid regret. Neither is wrong, just make sure you’re choosing for your future peace, not your present anger. - Accept that no choice will feel “right.” Whatever you decide, part of you will question it. Help them and you might resent the emotional cost. Walk away and you might wrestle with guilt.
There’s no clean answer when people who hurt you suddenly need you. The goal isn’t to find the perfect solution but to choose what you can live with and make peace with the complexity of it all.
Facing a family dilemma? Read about the parent who refused to give their retirement funds to their adult son, proving that sometimes saying “no” to family is the right choice. Check out their story here and see how they handled the pressure.
Comments
This is such a difficult thing to decide. On one hand, your BROTHER PROVED that you made the right choice, to NOT have children. On the other hand, can you be sure that GUILT won't eat you up inside? I am sure that whatever you decide, it will be what is BEST FOR YOU. It's too late for your parents to LEARN ANYTHING. Maybe if they show you some GENUINE REMORSE, You could make a decision that you can live with. I am praying for you AND your parents. Maybe ORHER PARENTS that are reading this post, will reconsider how they treat THEIR KIDS.
What will give you peace?
Usually, I am all for treating others the way they have treated you, but you sound like even after all they have done, you have sympathy for your parents and their situation.
I would caution, don't be a doormat. These people have treated you like trash before. It stands to reason that once their equilibrium has been restored, they might go back to old ways. Protect yourself from their cruelty if you decide to lend them aid.
Also, what does that aid look like? Do they want to move in with you? Are they looking for you to cover their bills? Buy them a house? What is reasonable and/or realistic? Whatever your aid looks like, don't set yourself on fire to keep them warm. I am sorry that you are dealing with this.
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