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Young family with children walking in town on summer holiday.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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"AITA for refusing to let my sister's family move in after she blew through her house money in two months on a "once in a lifetime" trip?"
My sister sold a paid-off house to fund a vacation.
Not a sabbatical. Not a business move. A vacation. Seven weeks across Europe and Southeast Asia, business class flights, five-star hotels, private tours, the whole thing. She and her husband documented every single moment on social media. I watched from my phone while eating leftovers at my kitchen table, thinking, okay, good for them I guess.
That was eight months ago.
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Last Tuesday she showed up at my front door with her husband, two kids, three oversized suitcases, and a look on her face like she was doing me a favor.
"We just need a few months," she said. "Just until we get back on our feet."
I stood there in my doorway and did not move.
Here's the part people keep skipping over when they take her side. That house was worth a little over four hundred thousand. Fully paid off. Their kids were ten and seven. They had no rent, no mortgage, and two decent incomes. They were not struggling before this. They made a choice. A very deliberate, very documented, very Instagram-optimized choice.
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Family looking at their home with sold sign.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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I asked her straight. "How much is left?"
She looked at her husband. He looked at the floor.
"We had some unexpected costs when we got back," she said.
I pushed. "How much is left from the sale?"
"It's complicated."
It wasn't complicated. I found out later from my mom that they came back with less than six thousand dollars. Two months. They burned through almost everything in two months and then spent the next six trying to float on credit cards before those maxed out too.
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I said no. I told her I love her but my house is not a fallback plan for a financial decision she made with her eyes open. I have a two-bedroom place. I work from home. I do not have the space, the bandwidth, or honestly the patience to absorb a family of four while she figures out what comes next.
She cried. Her husband stood behind her looking at the driveway and said nothing, which honestly made me angrier than if he had argued with me.
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My mom called me that same night. "You have a whole spare room."
"I use that room for work."
"She has children."
"I know she has children. She knew she had children when she sold the house."
My mom went quiet for a second and then said, "You've always been cold."
And there it is. I've always been cold. Not responsible. Not boundaried. Cold. Because I won't hand over my home and my peace to fix a situation I had zero part in creating.
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If a grown person decides to spend their entire life savings on a “once in a lifetime” trip, they should be prepared for the consequences after their return. No one should be held responsible for that decision other than them, and if you bring children into the mix, well, that's on you.
We can't blame the sister for refusing to take the family in, they are not her responsibily. It doesn't take a genius to predict that a vacation like that will burn through someone's money in no time, and the only ones who should be held accountable are the irresponsible parents who threw their life away for a few Instagram posts.
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Young family with children walking in town on summer holiday.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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My aunt texted me the next morning. "Family helps family." My cousin posted something vague on Facebook about people who only care about themselves. My other sister, the younger one, called to tell me I was being cruel and that I should "think about the kids."
I am thinking about the kids. I am thinking that their parents made this call, not me. I'm thinking that every soft landing someone builds for my sister is one less reason for her to sit with the weight of what she did. I helped her before. Three years ago when her car broke down I gave her two thousand dollars. She never paid it back and never mentioned it again. I let it go. But this is not a car. This is a house. This is her children's stability. And she traded it for content.
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They ended up staying with my mom for now. Cramped, tense, not ideal. My mom calls me every few days to give me updates like I'm supposed to feel guilty about the situation my sister built.
Here's what I know. My sister is charming and she is a disaster and those two things have always worked together perfectly because there has always been someone nearby willing to absorb the consequences of her choices. I love her. But I am not her safety net. And I'm tired of being made to feel like a villain for having a house and a boundary at the same time.
The lesson I keep coming back to is this: when someone burns their own house down and knocks on your door, you can feel sorry for them and still not let the dust in.
AITA for saying no, and do you think I'd be wrong to stop taking my mom's calls until this blows over?
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