I Knew My Daughter Didn’t Like My Job, but I Didn’t Expect Her to Hurt Me Like This

Family & kids
2 weeks ago

Many parents may find it hard to balance work and family while handling teenage judgment. They may face situations where kids embarrass them in public, struggle with respect, or cope with family stress, highlighting the emotional strain they experience.

Vivienne’s story:

Hello Bright Side!

I’ve seen a lot of posts here with people sharing their experiences, so I thought I’d share mine too and maybe find a bit of relief... I work at a fast food place that happens to be super close to my daughter’s school. It’s not glamorous, but it pays the bills and honestly the schedule works for me since I can keep an eye on things while she’s in school.

My daughter hates that I work there. She’s told me more than once that it’s “embarrassing” and that I “couldn’t find anything better.” I usually just let it roll off my back because, well, teenagers say stuff, right?

But the other day, she did something completely unexpectable, and I was in disbelief. She came in with her friends and completely humiliated me. She literally pointed at me behind the counter and said, “Look at this, my mom works at a fast food joint. None of your parents would stoop that low. I wish I’d never have to see my mom like this.”

I'm sorry about the loss of your husband. It's got to be hard. I watched my mother go through that hardship as a very small child. It sounds to me like your daughter does need to hear a bit of your and her reality. If she is unable to bring herself to treat you with respect at your work place and is supposed to be embarrassed to have her friends see you there then why in the world is she showing up there? I think you've shielded her too much. Do you have her responsible for household chores and regular responsibilities? You're both gone during the day so shared expectations is a no brainer. I just can't imagine treating anyone the way your daughter is treating you

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I swear, I felt my stomach drop. Like someone punched me. I didn’t even know what to say. I just kept working like nothing happened, but when I got home later, I cried in the bathroom so she wouldn’t see.

The thing is, she doesn’t get the full picture. After my husband passed, things got really hard. I had to take whatever job I could to keep a roof over our heads and food on the table. I wish I could shield her from all this, but it’s just reality right now.

But I can’t lie, what she said cut deep. Now I feel this distance between us, and I don’t even know how to start that conversation. Do I call her out? Do I let it go? Do I wait for her to come to me?

Bright Side, how do I handle this? Should I confront her about how badly it hurt me, or just chalk it up to teenage immaturity? I don’t want to ruin our mother-daughter relationship too... I’m stuck!

Thank you in advance,
Vivienne

Poor you to end up with a nasty brat like that...one day she will choke on those word.

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I think the mother daughter relationship is dead in the water. Let her see how much you do to keep her housed fed and clothed. She will stay an ungrateful entitled brat if you enable her behaviour.

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Don't cry in the bathroom. How old is she?
Mediterranean to do the household bills while she does her homework at the same table. If she asks what your doing let her in on it. Show her money flow, this is a paycheck, looks like alot right? Well, it has to pay this and this, I have to budget the money to afford food and bills. If you didn't get a big degree or if jobs are scarce in your area, let her know. I could probably get a fancier job but it would mean us moving from here and you going to a new school and I never wanted to do that to you with everything else you have been through. Stay in school child

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Thank you so much for sharing your story with us, Vivienne! We really appreciate your honesty and vulnerability, it’s not easy to open up about these moments. We’ve tried to gather some pieces of advice from others who’ve been through similar experiences, and we hope they offer a bit of guidance and support.

  • Be unapologetically you — It’s easy to feel like you have to “be a different mom” in her eyes, but you don’t. Let her see that your job doesn’t define your value. Model pride in your choices, it’s a subtle lesson she might not get now, but it sticks.
  • Lead by example — Sometimes actions speak louder than words. If she sees you handling your job with dignity and kindness, even when it’s tough, she’ll eventually internalize respect for work and people. Kids notice more than we think.
  • Talk when she’s receptive — Don’t try to hash things out right after she shamed you in front of her friends. Wait until it’s just the two of you, maybe after school or during a quiet evening. Context changes how teens hear you.
  • Remember: This phase will pass — It’s brutal now, and your feelings are valid, but this teenage embarrassment thing? It’s temporary. Keep showing her love, setting boundaries, and living your life with pride. Someday, she’ll get it, or at least, she’ll remember your resilience.

With understanding and patience, parents and teens can work through these challenging moments together. Taking small steps to communicate and set boundaries can strengthen trust and connection over time.
Read next: I Refuse to Give My 16-Year-Old Son a Bedroom Door

Comments

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Don't give her money to come in . Then take away all electronics you bought. Don't forget the cell phone....only feed her and don't give her a penny extra for at least a month. But in the end you raised her to be that girl

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What you do is get all of your daughters belongings make sure you get her cell phone and any computers she may have and tell her that since you provided her with everything she has in her life she doesn't deserve everything you have taken from her. Tell her if she wants any of the items you have taken then she needs to find a job and replace them. Then tell her to make sure she gets a job that will make sure she has a roof over her head food on the table and all other essentials. That is what she gets for being a disrespectful ungrateful brat. Teach her a lesson that she will never forget and never ever disrespect anyone who works in any jobs that she sees as embarrassing.
Make sure to tell her that she is the reason you are working to make sure she had all these things and she is the reason she has none of these things

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I agree with the comment from trey. No matter what kind of job it is it's supporting the things she wants and needs. If she can't see the responsibility in that and the hard work, take it all from her. For those saying she raised her to be that way, that's not true. You can raise kids to be respectful, not lazy and all and they still act like they deserve the world. It's how kids are these days. I am a parent and I be damned. Take all her devices. TV phone tables, and leave her five outfits out for school a week and take and put up the rest. Leave one pair of shoes out. Make her do chores but if she's old enough for a job tell her she needs to get because you will no longer be supporting her behavior when it's barely enough for your bills and lights I'm sure. People gentle parent their kids now and days and that's where they are messing up. Raise her to work for her stuff like we were raised, no shame in it. She needs to learn it's never okay to look down on someone because of their occupation or status. You never know when it may happen to you or you could lose everything. Stop shielding her and give her the hard truth. You won't regret it.

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Is it bad that I would be really petty about this? I wouldn't make her dinner that evening and when she asks what's up. Well, you don't want me to work at where I fo, so why would you want the food it pays for? Also she'd be getting a job. Obviously she thinks she can do better, she's getting a job. I wouldn't starve her, but she's apologising

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