Buckle up, folks! We’ve got a doozy of a family drama on our hands! Meet our protagonist, a successful sibling who’s been through the wringer with her opioid-addicted sister. After years of rehab, prison, and identity theft attempts, she’s finally had enough! ♀️ But now, the family is pressuring her to cough up another $10K for yet another rehab stint. Is she being too harsh by refusing to pay? Or is it time to cut ties with this toxic situation? Let’s dive in and find out! ️♀️
Sister’s Opioid Addiction Nightmare!

From Party Girl to Dropout

❌ No Prescription, Just Addiction ♀️

From Rehab to Prison and Back Again

Parents Demand More Money for Rehab

♀️ Enough is Enough! I’m Done Paying

My Sister is Dead to Me

Family Pressures Me to Pay Up

Parents Demand $10K, Say It’s No Big Deal

Labeled a Bad Sister and Daughter

Am I Being Too Harsh?

❓ Am I Wrong for Refusing to Pay? ♀️

Please Be Honest With Me

Family Feud: To Pay or Not to Pay?
Well, well, well… looks like our protagonist is caught between a rock and a hard place! Her sister’s addiction has caused nothing but chaos and misery for the entire family, and now they expect her to fork over another $10K for rehab. Talk about a guilt trip! But wait, there’s more! Our girl is the only one refusing to pay this time, and the family is laying the pressure. They’re even pulling the “she’s family” card and shaming her for being successful. The audacity! So, what do you think? Is she being a total b*tch for not helping out, or is it time to cut the cord on this toxic mess? Let’s see what the internet has to say about this juicy drama!
NTA. It’s tough but you’ve done enough. Stop and move on.

Enabling an addict won’t solve anything. NTA.

Protecting yourself from toxic family is important. You’re NTA

Not responsible for sister’s addiction, NTA made a tough call

Is the sister willing to go to rehab? Valid point.

Not responsible for sister’s choices. Sending her to rehab is futile.

Family co-dependency issues: NTA sister should seek therapy

Former addict shares personal experience and advice about addiction and rehab.

When rehab fails, cutting ties may be the only option

No obligation to pay for sister’s rehab. Time to extract.

NTA – Don’t give in to the family card.

Supportive comment acknowledges the difficulty of the situation.

Not the a-hole for not funding sister’s rehab.

Heartbreaking addiction situation. NTA for setting boundaries with family.

You have the right to decline. Not the a-hole.

Setting boundaries with addicts is tough, but necessary. NTA.

Enabling won’t help, sister must want rehab herself. NTA

Setting boundaries with family is hard but necessary.

Generosity has its limits, and stealing identity crosses the line. NTA

Setting boundaries for your mental health is not selfish ❤️

Recovering addict shares her story and suggests buprenorphine/subutex treatment for sister.

Addiction is a tough battle and you can’t make someone sober

NTA: Validated but still struggling, seek professional help ❤️

Setting boundaries with family isn’t easy. NTA for saying no.

Putting yourself first when it comes to family and addiction.

Enabling an addict is not the solution. NTA

Addict sister not helped by family, NTA for refusing money.

Choosing rehab and getting sent to rehab are different. NTA

NTA. Empathetic reply and advice on dealing with addiction.

Rehab hardly ever works, as you’ve seen first hand.

Is the sister going to rehab willingly or being pressured?

Don’t let others spend your money. NTA for not funding sister’s rehab

Recovering addict supports OP’s decision to not fund sister’s rehab.

NTA- Burnt out from funding sister’s rehab, not an a-hole

Enabling an addict won’t help, NTA made the right decision.

Choosing to let go of a drug-addict sister.

Take control of your finances and don’t enable addiction. #NTA

Rehab won’t work unless your sister wants it herself. NTA

Recovering alcoholic shares her story and advises OP to set boundaries. NTA

Breaking ties with addict family member can lead to progress

Surviving 12 years as a junkie, NTA. Enabling family won’t help.

Rehab doesn’t work unless the addict seeks help. NTA

Enabling an addict by always paying for rehab is a problem.

Sibling’s addiction: NTA for not funding rehab anymore

NTA. A heartbreaking but necessary decision to protect oneself and family.

Sometimes tough love is the only option

NTA. You’ve done enough. You don’t owe her anything

Putting family first doesn’t mean putting yourself last. ♀️

Setting boundaries when helping struggling loved ones is crucial.

Rehab doesn’t work without the addict’s desire to change

Don’t waste your resources on someone who doesn’t want help. ♀️

Supporting sister’s rehab may not help, wait till she recovers.

Addiction is heartbreaking for everyone involved. NTA.

NTA. Emotional turmoil and enabling won’t help sister’s rehab.

Sister tries to steal identity, NTA refuses to fund rehab

Supportive comment on addiction struggles, sharing personal experience. NTA.

Take a firm stand and cut off ties if she relapses

Heartbreaking experience with addict brother, NTA for not funding sister’s rehab

Break free and stay consistent with your decision.

Attending support group meetings to cope with addiction in family

Brother’s success story shows sister has to come to realization.

NTA. Sister needs to want to get clean, not guilt trip.

Setting boundaries with addicts in the family. You’re NTA

Former addict advises not to enable sister’s addiction, offers safety tip.

Don’t let addiction rob you of compassion. NTA.

Addict sister won’t heal unless she wants to, stop financing.

“No is a full sentence”: Setting boundaries with family.

Rehab may be a money pit. It’s okay to say no. NTA

Addiction is a disease; hope she recovers. NTA

Set boundaries with addicts, addiction is a family illness.

Family financial support for addicts: where to draw the line?

No easy answer to addiction, but giving up is valid.

Sister’s rehab, not sister’s responsibility. NTA.

Stand your ground, you’re not responsible for your parents’ mistakes.
