Your right, too blunt by far! It's her choice, hopefully, they will eventually both start thinking about their future, and may ask for comment.
My Daughter Plans to Marry a Janitor, I Want to Stop Her Before It’s Too Late

Janine’s story:
Hello Bright Side,
Throwaway, because I don’t want this blowing up in my face. My daughter is in her late 20s and recently got engaged. Her fiancé seems like a nice enough guy. Polite, helpful, clearly cares about her. No red flags personality-wise.
Here’s the issue: he works as a janitor. I know how that sounds already, so please hear me out before grabbing the pitchforks. I grew up dirt poor. Stability mattered a lot to me.
I worked very hard my whole life working in a school kitchen. It wasn’t glamorous, but it paid the bills and gave my kids food and a roof. I wanted more for my daughter.
When she told me what her fiancé does, I said (probably too bluntly) that she should think about marrying someone with a “real career” and long-term prospects. I wasn’t trying to insult him as a person. I was thinking about healthcare, retirement, kids, all the boring parent stuff.
She completely lost it. Told me I was classist, judgmental, and that I had no right to look down on honest work. We’ve been tense ever since.
Fast forward to last week. They stayed over at my place for the night after family dinner. I couldn’t sleep and ended up overhearing them talking in the guest room.
And then I heard this: “Your mom worked in a school kitchen her whole life and thinks my work isn’t respectable?” I swear my stomach dropped through the floor. It sounded hurt. Confused. And yeah, kinda fair.
Now I’m sitting here spiraling. I feel defensive because I know how hard manual jobs are. I’ve lived it. But I also feel embarrassed because maybe I was projecting my own fears and regrets onto her relationship.
My husband says I should apologize and move on. Part of me agrees. Another part of me still worries I’m watching my daughter sign up for a harder life.
So, Bright Side, was I out of line, or was I just being a concerned parent who said it badly? Should I apologize to them both, or stand my ground?
Best,
Janine

It sounds like who already realize what a classist jerk you've been, but you're also looking at this from the wrong angle. There's an old expression in the business world that goes, "The closer you are to the top, the closer you are to the door." What that means is, when things start to go wrong with a company, the CEO is going to be the first one to get fired. So while it may not be glamorous or exciting, if you're worried about stability, you can't do much better than a janitor. People are always going to be slobs. Buildings will always need to be cleaned. And those skills are transferable between any kind of industry, anywhere in the world. And, contrary to what you believe, many janitors make pretty good money--it is skilled labor requiring you to deal with toxic chemicals, hazardous materials, and even biological contamination. There's far more dignity in honest hard work than in some fancy corner office that you're going to lose in a few years to the Next Big Thing.
Don't forget to CHEW VIGOROUSLY before you swallow.🫨
You think being a janitor ISN'T STABLE? No matter WHERE you are JANITORS, WINDOW WASHERS, HOUSE CLEANERS, ETC... will ALWAYS BE NEEDED. YOU of all people, should realize that. As far as "I couldn't sleep, and I overheard them", WHAT BULLSHIT. YOU WERE EAVESDROPPING, AND YOU MEANT TO. You DO owe them BOTH an apology. You should be thankful, that she isn't "holding out" for some unattainable dream man, of YOUR choosing. You are a snob, and whatever you think you were trying to convey to her, YOU blew it, mom.
You're so wrong. You don't get to decide who she marries.
Thank you for sharing your story with us, Janine! Hopefully something here helps you see the situation from a slightly different angle or gives you a next step that feels doable.
- You’re not wrong for worrying — Listen, being worried about your kid’s future doesn’t make you a villain. That’s literally the job description of being a parent. But concern and judgment can sound real similar when they come out sideways.
If you want any chance of being heard, start by owning the delivery. A simple “I handled that badly” goes way further than doubling down on the point you were trying to make. - Apologizing doesn’t mean you lose — We know apologizing to your kid feels backwards, like you’re giving up authority or something. You’re not. You’re modeling how adults repair damage.
You can say, “I’m sorry for disrespecting your work. That wasn’t fair,” without suddenly endorsing every life choice she makes. Two things can be true at once. - Your daughter is building her life, not repaying yours — This one’s hard, but important. She doesn’t owe it to you to choose a partner that validates your sacrifices. She owes it to herself to choose someone she can actually live with, fight with, grow with.
Supporting that doesn’t erase what you went through, it just means her life gets to be different.
Situations like these also open the door to growth, empathy, and stronger family bonds. With honest reflection and open conversations, misunderstandings can turn into moments of deeper connection and mutual respect.
Read next: My Daughter Disrespected My Sacrifices—And I Refused to Let It Slide
Comments
Apologize, open up and let them know the WHY. Its a start, you are reacting out of fear, not true logic. My best friends dad was our high school janitor. She was NEVER embarassed by him, but super proud. And let me tell you, she kept people in line, Dont be disrespectful to my dad, hes not your personal maid.
He retired 15 yrs ago, full pension, benefits, etc. He provided for his family, worked hard and everyone at school considered him a father figure. Please dont let your past cloud her future.
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