Teen Asks If She Is Wrong For Sending Her Eight (8) Siblings In Foster Care So She Can Go To College And Have A Better Life

3 half-siblings, 4 step-siblings, and one full sister... That's just too much for one teen

Damjan
Teen Asks If She Is Wrong For Sending Her Eight (8) Siblings In Foster Care So She Can Go To College And Have A Better Life

Parents should take care of their kids, right? Well, in an ideal world, that would be true.

But we don't live in a perfect world. And unfortunately, Reddit AITA stories often prove that.

A 19-year-old girl's heartbreaking testimony recently went viral on the AITA subreddit. The account was posted by a Reddit user going by the handle Maybeenobaby, whose family, which included eight siblings all younger than her, "reached rock bottom."

"My mother and stepfather are going to be going away for a long time, and everyone is in a rush to get all these kids into homes," the author explained. And because Maybeenobaby is the only one over 18, everyone expects her to do it.

She has "3 half siblings on my mom's side (15, 11, and 9), 4 stepsiblings (14, 12, 9, and 6), and 1 full sister (6f)." How many moms and dads are there in this equation?

How many grandparents? They are all remaining silent and letting a teen do their job.

But now that she believes she has the chance "to have a better life," the author has decided to take her 6-year-old sister and relocate to a different state. The seven other siblings will have to enter foster care while this is happening.

Maybeenobaby wonders if she actually made the right choice, doubtlessly feeling somewhat guilty. She now asks Redditors if she made the right choice.

OP asks:

OP asks:Reddit

She has eight siblings

She has eight siblingsReddit

Her mother and stepfather are going away for a long time, and everyone wants OP to take care of the kids. She doesn't.

Her mother and stepfather are going away for a long time, and everyone wants OP to take care of the kids. She doesn't.Reddit

OP's grandmother is offering her a way out. She wants to send her to college.

OP's grandmother is offering her a way out. She wants to send her to college.Reddit

OP arranged for all the kids except her sister to be sent away to foster care

OP arranged for all the kids except her sister to be sent away to foster careReddit

Kids are angry at OP. She is now asking if she is the AH here

Kids are angry at OP. She is now asking if she is the AH hereReddit

Redditors were clear:

Redditors were clear:Reddit

There should be many parents and grandparents here

There should be many parents and grandparents hereReddit

How can someone judge a 19 Y.O.?

How can someone judge a 19 Y.O.?Reddit

OP explains:

OP explains:Reddit

People who work in the foster care system explain:

People who work in the foster care system explain:Reddit

Things like this shouldn't happen

Things like this shouldn't happenReddit

Teens shouldn't be pressured

Teens shouldn't be pressuredReddit

This would be a good option, but it still means she won't have a life

This would be a good option, but it still means she won't have a lifeReddit

The only AHs here are the parents

The only AHs here are the parentsReddit

So true...

So true...Reddit

OP is just 19. Enough said

OP is just 19. Enough saidReddit

Maybe the parents are going to prison?

Maybe the parents are going to prison?Reddit

According to national data from The Children's Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families (ACF), the number of children in foster care in the country declined for the third year in a row. 407,000 kids were reportedly in foster care nationally as of 2020.

Children and teenagers spend 12 to 20 months on average in foster care. Most foster children stay in their foster homes for one to five months.

Many children join the foster care system at an average age of 7 due to living in an unstable family setting, abuse, or neglect. Children in foster care have a stable environment to grow and develop.

When a youngster reaches the post-high school age of 18 to 21, they are no longer eligible for foster care placement. As members of the broader population, they are left to figure out how to sustain themselves.

Unfortunately, approximately 20% of these young individuals will become homeless when they reach adulthood.

Damjan