I Gave Up Everything for My Daughter — Now She Wants My Retirement Too

Family & kids
2 weeks ago

Parents do not owe their children an inheritance. If my child did this I would design thrm. It's my life savings to get me through old age and so I can provide for myself. What a selfish daughter.

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After years of sacrifices for her family, a mom starts saving for her retirement, only to face an unexpected pressure from her daughter to hand it over. Her story shows the struggle between love, boundaries, and protecting hard-earned peace.

Here is her letter:

Hello Bright Side,

I never thought I’d be writing something like this, but I’m stuck in a situation that’s been eating at me.

I’m 57, a single mom, and I’ve spent most of my adult life working extra shifts, saying no to holidays, and putting my own wants on hold so my daughter could have a good start. She went to a good school, had a car by the time she turned 18, and I even helped with her college costs. I never expected anything in return, just hoped she’d grow up independent and grounded.

For the last decade, I’ve been slowly building up my retirement savings. My plan was simple: once I stop working, I’d finally travel, relax, and enjoy the years I have left without worrying about bills. When my daughter found out about the money, her first reaction was to suggest I use it to help her buy a house.

Give her 5k and advise her you are now her roommate for life. If she balks, then you raised a k*nT.

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I told her that I’m not sitting on endless cash. And I said it completely calm. I’ve fulfilled my role as a parent, and now it’s my turn to take care of myself. This money is for my future, not a backup fund for her.

She didn’t take it very well. She said I was selfish and started bringing up things from her childhood to make me feel guilty. Now she’s barely speaking to me and telling relatives I’m “keeping money from her” and that I’m a “cheapskate” while she struggles to cover her rent.

Friends I’ve spoken to say she’s trying to guilt-trip me and that this isn’t about need, it’s about entitlement.

love my daughter more than anything. I also know I’ve worked too hard to throw away my plans for retirement. So I’m standing my ground. But I can’t help but think that she’s still my daughter and I’m the one who brought her into this world. Should I’ve just helped her with the house?

With love,
Pearl.

1. Document your plans.

What an entitled brat. Sounds like you gave her too much in the past and now she thinks you owe her. Just say no. Take care of yourself first.

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Write down your retirement goals, budgets, and allocation plans. This isn’t just for you. It also creates a clear, factual reference if family members question how your money is intended to be used. Consider including projected expenses for healthcare, housing, and travel so it’s clear that the funds are already accounted for.

2. Redirect requests to professionals.

If she keeps pressing for financial help, suggest she meet with a financial advisor or housing counselor. This shifts the responsibility away from you and shows her there are structured ways to solve her problems without taking your savings. Professional advice can also help her understand the long-term consequences of relying on someone else’s money.

3. Create a separate help fund.

If you still want the option to help in emergencies, consider putting a small, fixed amount in a separate account. That way, you can provide support without dipping into your retirement or feeling pressured to give more. This account should have clear rules. For example, only for unexpected medical costs or urgent repairs, so it doesn’t become a regular source of income.

4. Set boundaries with neutral phrases.

Have short, calm responses ready, like: “That’s not part of my retirement plan” or “I can’t change my financial goals”. Keeping your wording neutral makes it harder for her to twist your words into emotional ammunition. Repeating the same phrase each time can help shut down arguments without escalating emotions.

5. Strengthen your support network.

In giving her.everythig. she enabled her daughter. This is a monster the woman helped to create. It's your money. Just say No. You don't own anyone an explanation or excuse. No is a complete sentence.

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You raised an entitled brat. I get providing for your child, but anyone who doesn't work for anything can't appreciate the things or the giver of the things. Take one of your vacations, you'll enjoy yourself and feel better. I suggest a cruise... take 10-14 days, don't but the wifi so you can disconnect.

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Stay close to friends, siblings, or trusted relatives who understand your position. Having allies can help counter any misinformation she might spread in the family and keep you from feeling isolated. They can also offer perspective and remind you why your decision is reasonable when guilt starts to creep in.

If you think that was a tricky family situation, wait until you read about the woman whose daughter-in-law expected her to babysit for free, and how she turned the tables in a way no one saw coming.

Comments

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No means no. There is no reason for you to help her buy a house. You have helped her be entitled by buying a car for her, and I am sure plenty of everything else she needed, etc. It sounds like in making sure she had what she 'needed' you forgot to teach her to work for what she needed. Your daughter is the selfish one and going to others to tell her she is correct that you should help her buy a house is very wrong on her end. Even if all you do is pay the downpayment, how will she be able to handle monthly payments if she tan't handle her rent. She needs to see a fanacial advisor to learn how to handle her money. Or you can get her a few good books on the topic which is how, along with how I was raised, helped me to learn how to handle money. Then my son read the books. He is 42 and other than his monthly rent, utilities, insurance, etc. he has no bills, no credit cards and a nicely healthy bank account which is terrific for an autistic kiddo! He is totally independent.

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This seems like click bait. First of all being named pearl im guessing you are over 90 years old. This just seems like AI generated click bait. Also why did people ever name daughters pearl? Like I recently learned about how pearls were jewelry only intended for widows, which, seems dark, like they couldn't wear shiny stuff. Why name a child after that? Plus, its also just hardened clam mucus around and irritant...

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She wentto a good school, graduated college, so she can buy a house! Don’t give up your retirement or else you’ll be draining it. First you buy her that house, then on renovations, fixes, furniture, and who knows what else

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You worked 2 jobs to put her though private school, you help with collage, should have taken loans or worked toward the cost of tuition. You also bought her a car. Tell her to get a job pay for her own house and let you enjoy your retirement something you worked for your whole life. She should have bought her own car or at least paid half. She thinks she is entitled to everything because you gave birth to her. After the age of 18 she is an adult she should have been paying for things herself
She needs to grow up 😭

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