‘I told her to leave immediately and said she was no longer welcome to stay with me’: 29-year-old refuses to let her sister move back in after discovering she secretly recorded a private therapy session

5 months ago 23

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  • AITH for refusing to let my sister move back in after she secretly recorded my therapy session?

    T

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • I (29F) have been in therapy for about a year after a really rough breakup and some family trauma.

  • My therapist does both in person and telehealth sessions, and I sometimes take the virtual ones at home because I live alone and it feels safe.

  • A few weeks ago, my sister (26F) asked to crash at my place for a few days because her roommate kicked her out.

  • I agreed, but made it clear I'd still need privacy for my therapy sessions. During one of those sessions, my therapist mentioned something painful about my childhood specifically, how my sister's behavior had contributed to my anxiety.

  • I didn't know until later, but my sister had apparently recorded the entire session on her phone from the other room.

  • 10

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • She confronted me later, saying I was lying about her to strangers and that she had every right to know what I was saying.

  • I was horrified. That session was confidential, and she violated not only my privacy but also legal and ethical boundaries.

  • I told her to leave immediately and said she was no longer welcome to stay with me.

  • The rest of the family isn’t far behind. Parents swoop in with the world’s most practiced guilt routine, pitching forgiveness and hospitality as if privacy never mattered. They call her cold, dramatic, selfish, the usual greatest hits. The person actually dealing with betrayal feels a little lighter and a lot clearer about the term boundaries. The only thing more outrageous than the snooping is the expectation that criminal snooping earns bonus hospitality and a spare key.

  • My parents think I overreacted they're saying she was hurt and that I should understand her feelings.

  • JAPAN

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • But to me, what she did was a massive betrayal. Now my family is pressuring me to let her move back in temporarily because she has nowhere to go, but I've refused.

  • They're calling me cold and selfish. I feel guilty because she's my sister, but also violated and angry.

  • If ever there was a time for locking the door and changing the WiFi password, this is it. Bad behavior sometimes demands a permanent guest ban. In some families, self-respect beats holiday spirit, and the only open invitation is to pack up and try violating someone else’s comfort zone

  • AITA for standing my ground and refusing to let her stay with me again?

  • NTA Late-Champion8678 She can move in with your parents and violate their privacy.

  • ConstantTill4471 You are not AITH, your sister and your parents are.. she took a private Doctor visit and recorded it, after you told her you needed privacy.. Don't allow her back and you probably should go low contact or even no contact even if she apologizes.

  • kittendollie13 Your sister is wrong on so many levels. Your family is coddling their golden child. She can move in with them. You actually dodged a bullet because wherever she goes, she won't leave. Her roommate may have kicked her out because she wasn't paying her part for living there. You don't need a hobosexual leech living with you. You haven't done anything wrong.

  • KittyPuperMamaPerson Holy shitballs! This is the kind of behavior that gave you anxiety! She just proved that she isn't safe for you to be around. Op, please for the love of humanity, say to your parents exactly that, "She showed how she gives me anxiety and negativity impacts my life." Then demand that they deny it with facts. Do not give in. She is your own emotional terrorizer.

  • LastyearhereXXVL Your parents and sister are sick. Cut them off. I don't say this flippantly. Cut them off.

  • AlohaKiliki62 Hey sis mom and dad said you could move in with them! Thanks mom/dad for allowing sis to stay with you since she has no where to go. Stay strong and "cold" and protect your space! Don't feel guilt for kicking her out of YOUR space she violated your privacy and should have told you oh that she could hear your therapy session. She FAFOed.

  • Bookaholicforever NTA. I would just say to your sister "you violated my privacy to record my therapy session. What in those actions makes what I said about you being a cause of anxiety, a lie? I don't trust you in my house and I'm guessing that you deserved to be kicked out."

  • NTA. stickylarue Get her gone. She does not have your best interests at heart. She's sneaky and vindictive. Tell your parents they can have her as they spawned her.

  • NTA ima_steal_ur_kid I go to therapy myself, and I while I do sometimes tell my mom what I talk about with my therapist, she still respects the confidentiality because privacy is important. If your sister doesn't understand that your privacy when it comes to being vulnerable around someone who is helping you is important, she should suffer the consequences. Especially since she's a functional adult with hopefully some common sense. Give her an ultimatum to either delete the recording, or you'll

  • NTA Socklovingwolfman They can let her move in with them and violate their privacy.

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