There’s a particular kind of love that looks like protection but functions like a trap. It doesn’t happen all at once. It happens in small decisions, each one reasonable on its own — a parent stepping in during a hard moment, then again, then again, until stepping in becomes the default and stepping back becomes unthinkable.
By the time anyone notices the pattern, it’s been the weather for so long that nobody can remember what the climate was supposed to feel like.
A man recently posted on Reddit’s r/relationship_advice recently describing exactly this — decades of watching his elderly parents pour their remaining energy into maintaining his middle-aged sister’s dependence, while she remains no more prepared for the world than she was at twenty. He’s been raising the alarm for years. They hear him, nod, and change nothing.
What’s striking isn’t the dysfunction itself — families like this are more common than people admit — it’s how invisible the mechanism is to the people inside it.
Enabling rarely feels like enabling. It feels like love, like mercy, like doing what any decent person would do. And every accommodation makes the next one easier to justify and the eventual reckoning harder to survive.
The parents aren’t villains. Neither, probably, is the sister. But good intentions running on autopilot for long enough can produce outcomes that look a lot like neglect — just neglect dressed up as devotion.
The question the brother is really asking isn’t how to fix his sister. It’s whether love is supposed to have an expiration date on discomfort.
The brother explains the details of his situation









The brother continues:





More Bolde Stories
But it goes deeper than that:






He’s genuinely at the end of his rope


Okay, the comments are split down the middle here, but I get why the brother’s losing sleep. The thing that makes it so slippery is the timing. Every time independence comes up, so does a new ailment — a hip thing, a tweaked ankle, some mystery pain — and there’s always a doctor willing to sign off on it, which the parents take as case closed.
And how are you supposed to argue with that? You can’t exactly tell your sister her sprained ankle is fake without sounding like a complete monster, and honestly that might be the whole trick, whether anyone’s running it on purpose or not. Mom and Dad have somehow turned every single setback into proof she needs more shielding, not less — and now two people in their 70s and 80s are running themselves into the ground to keep it up.

Strip away the specifics and what you’ve got is a family that’s quietly picked “comfortable today” over “okay in twenty years” every single time. Nobody’s getting her ready for anything. They’re just keeping her topped up — fed, housed, cushioned from every bump — and that works right up until the people doing the cushioning aren’t around anymore. That’s the cliff the brother can see plain as day, and the one his parents apparently can’t, or won’t.


And honestly? The guilt he owns up to at the end is the most relatable part of the whole thing. Knowing in your head that something isn’t yours to fix, and actually being able to sit on your hands while it falls apart — those are two totally different skills, and plenty of people spend their whole lives acing the first and flunking the second.
He swears up and down he won’t be her caretaker. He also admits that if she’s out there grinding DoorDash and her car dies, he’s not going to be able to just… let it happen. That’s not really him contradicting himself. It’s the gap between a boundary you say out loud and a boundary somebody actually leans on — and something tells me that one’s getting leaned on, ready or not.


