I Started to Work and My Stepmom Quit Her Job on Purpose Hoping I’d Provide

Family & kids
2 weeks ago
I Started to Work and My Stepmom Quit Her Job on Purpose Hoping I’d Provide

Many young adults face emotional and financial manipulation from parents or stepparents, especially after becoming financially independent. This story explores family guilt dynamics and expert-backed advice on setting boundaries and reclaiming autonomy.

Kate’s letter:

Hey Bright Side!

I (23F) finally started my first full-time job about three months ago. Nothing crazy, just an entry-level office gig, but honestly? It felt huge. I was proud, first time paying my own rent, buying groceries, not depending on anyone.

Then, my stepmom dropped this bomb that she got fired. I felt bad for her, until she said, dead serious, “I’ve sacrificed enough for this family. Now it’s your turn.”

Your parents should bill you for everything they did for you up until you got a job, and then when it's all paid off, you're all square.

-
-
Reply

At first, I laughed a little because I thought she was joking. But she wasn’t. She said it like she meant it, like I somehow owed her for raising me.

I looked at my dad, waiting for him to jump in or laugh or something, but he said something like that I never needed anything while I was growing up. They made sure of that. Now it was my turn to help out for a while.

So I did, at first. I started covering small things: groceries, bills, gas.

You don’t owe step or dad anything, you didn’t ask to be born. It’s the law parents must fed clothed & put a roof over your head. Go n/contact forever. Best of luck to you.

-
-
Reply

It wasn't your decision for them and to have you in the first place they took care of there responsibilities

-
-
Reply

"they made sure you never needed anything growing up and now it's time to return the favour", huh?

That doesn't seem right.

Sounds like they want repayment for doing the bare basic minimum a parent should do when they decide to bring a child into the world :\

Hot take, but I think that people don't need to repay their parents for taking care of them. It's not like you asked to be born.

-
-
Reply
2 weeks ago
This is so personal that we just can't show it to you.

Having raised 3 kids, I have never once expected them to pay me back for choosing to have them

-
-
Reply

Nah. I didn't ask them to have me. When you have a baby, it's your job to raise it to adulthood. Don't want the responsibility? Don't have kids. Easy.

-
-
Reply

I kinda think you aren't obligated to help them but it's nonwriten code to help out your parent while you working

-
-
Reply

But the more I helped, the more they leaned on me. Suddenly, I was paying for things I never agreed to, utilities, gas, even their phone plan. Eventually, I couldn’t keep up. My paycheck barely covered my own rent, let alone theirs.

So I asked my dad if he could help out until I got paid again. He refused. Said I should “learn what it’s like to take responsibility.”

Oh wait, that wasn't mentioned before. It sounded like your were still living with them. Aw heck no, you were raised to fend for yourself, you are doing just that. They need to figure it out

-
-
Reply

That’s when things started to click. They weren’t struggling. They just decided I was their new safety net.

Every time I tried to talk about boundaries or saving money for myself, they’d guilt-trip me with lines like, “After everything we’ve done for you,” or “You wouldn’t even have this job if it weren’t for us.”

Are your grandparents alive? If so you should ask them how much money your father gives them? If they tell you nothing, then you should tell your father & stepmom as soon as they pay your grandparents bills you will pay theirs. If it makes them angry then call them out on their B...S...,

-
-
Reply

I’m honestly shaking writing this. What do you even do when your own parents treat your hard work like their backup plan? Do I walk away?

Am I being selfish for wanting to keep what little I’ve earned for myself? I worked so hard to get here, to be independent, and somehow they still found a way to make me feel like I owe them everything.

Best,
Kate

AI-generated Image

You helped them and went above and beyond and now they feel entitled to you supporting them indefinitely. Nope. Put on your own oxygen mask first. Block them if necessary. They need to get off their lazy butts and get jobs and take care of themselves.

-
-
Reply

Hey, thanks so much for sharing your story, Kate, that took real courage. We know how heavy that kind of family situation can be, so we pulled together some advice that might actually help you navigate it. You deserve support that feels real, not empty words.

  • You can love them and still walk away — It’s not all-or-nothing, you know? You don’t have to hate your dad or stepmom to stop letting them drain you. You can love them, wish them well, and still say, “I can’t be responsible for your choices.” Love doesn’t mean becoming someone’s emotional or financial punching bag.
  • Stop explaining yourself to people who don’t listen — If you’ve already tried to explain how you feel, and they still twist it, you’re not having a conversation, you’re being gaslit. Stop trying to make them understand. They don’t want to. Save your explanations for people who are capable of hearing you.
  • Being angry doesn’t make you ungrateful — You’re allowed to be furious. You’re allowed to feel betrayed. Anger doesn’t erase the good memories, it just means you see the truth now.
    Don’t let anyone convince you your emotions make you “selfish.” Anger’s just the part of you that still believes you deserve better.

Breaking free from family guilt isn’t easy, but it’s absolutely possible. With self-awareness, boundaries, and the right support, anyone can rebuild trust in themselves and create a life defined by choice, not obligation.

Read next: My Sister Swears She’ll Move Out Soon, but I Feel Like I’m Being Played

Comments

Get notifications

You're just being dramatic, that's all i can say. poor parent thought they can depend on their daughter...after giving her everything they can as you said

-
-
Reply

For starters, what is your dad doing during all this, is he employed or retired? Helping in a hard spot is one thing, this 0 to 60 of responsibility is something else. They gave you support (theoretically) when you needed it prior to full-time employment but they would have had much better ability, financially, to do so and I assume you were working at least part-time Were you living at home on or mostly on their dime in the 4 years or so (HS grad to 23) before this full-time job - was there friction in the relationship during that time? To try to stretch a beginner paycheck to support a full household is quite an expectation. You don't say if the rent you pay is to them because you live at home still or if you are trying to support your own small place as well as theirs. I would somehow assume they have far more options for income than you do and they are trying to force you into some obtuse vision of self-reliance maybe ( forcing you out from under the supporting parental wing ) Unfortunately this tac and its sudden stress surge could be more likely to end up causing NC for a time than anything else. And did your step actually lose her job or is this your parents effort to literally shove you out of the nest because they see you as taking too much time to launch yourself?

-
-
Reply

Oh wow that’s rough. You’re not being selfish at all, you're being taken advantage of. Helping out is one thing but they’ve turned it into an expectation. You worked hard for your independence and you have every right to protect it!🙌

-
-
Reply

If you can't help out your family in their time of need, then you're really selfish! You said you just got a job and started paying rent? Who was covering all your expenses until then?

-
-
Reply

Related Reads