Sibling relationships can be complicated, but what happens when one sibling is constantly causing drama and pushing others away? Meet our 16-year-old protagonist and her socially awkward 14-year-old sister. The younger sister’s lack of social skills and constant criticism have driven a wedge between them, and now their parents are getting involved. But is it the older sister’s responsibility to help her sibling? Let’s dive into the story and find out.
Not-So-Close Sisters ♀️

The Smarty-Pants Sister

Board Game Blues

No Fun Allowed

Aunt’s Unfortunate Encounter

Avoiding Sister Time ⏰

Video Game Critic

Unwanted Help

Friends No More

Lonely Sister

Parents Step In

Not My Job ♀️

Sisterly Dislike

Hating Every Second ⏳

Parents’ Anger

Family Feud: Whose Responsibility Is It?
Our protagonist is tired of her younger sister’s constant criticism and lack of social skills. The situation has reached a boiling point, with the older sister refusing to spend time with her sibling and their parents getting involved. The parents believe it’s the older sister’s responsibility to help her sibling, but she disagrees, saying it’s their job, not hers. This has caused even more tension in the family. So, who’s right in this situation? Let’s see what the internet thinks of this family drama…
NTA. Sister’s behavior may be due to autism or entitlement.

NTA- You’re not obligated to include her when hanging out with friends

NTA: Sister’s lack of social skills and rude behavior discussed.

“NTA. Have you sat your sister down and told her ‘look, you’re an insufferable asshat to everyone you know, and if you keep going you’re gonna end up alone with no friends, no boyfriend/girlfriend and possibly no family, because even I can’t stand your bullshit. Stop acting like you’re better than everyone else, because you’re not'”

Helping a neurodivergent sibling understand empathy: therapy and exposure.

NTA: Sister may have autism, recommend therapy and communication classes.

Teen refuses to help sister: NTA, parents should handle it.

Teen refuses to help sister: NTA, set boundaries, seek guidance.

Sister’s frustrating behavior might need ASD screening.

NTA
Sister may be on the spectrum, needs help. Not your job.
“NTA. Your sister sounds difficult. Your parents shouldn’t force friendships.”

Parents enabling sister’s behavior. NTA. Real world consequences await.

Sibling conflict: Who’s responsible? Family counseling may help.

NTA: Sister’s high IQ and poor social skills, parents’ fault.

Is she the real-life Sheldon Cooper?

NTA. Help your sister develop social skills with professional guidance.

Therapist shocked by lack of diagnosis, recommends second opinion.

Escape the chaos at home and plan your independence!

Stand up for yourself now, or be stuck later.

Seeking help from school counselor to address sister’s issues.

NTA – Foster individual relationships, don’t force sibling inclusion.

NTA- Awareness of ASD in females and parental responsibility

“Parents ignore warnings about entitled sister, now she’s lonely. NTA!”

NTA. Parents should handle it. Teens don’t want younger siblings.

Is therapy the solution for her possible autism?
