At just eighteen, she broke free from the suffocating grip of her emotionally abusive parents, carving out a life of independence with nothing but her resilience and hard-earned savings. Every dollar in her college fund is a testament to the battles she’s fought and the dreams she’s fiercely protecting, a fragile hope for a future untainted by the pain of her past.
But now, her grandmother’s desperate call fractures that hard-won peace, begging for help to bail out the very people who crushed her spirit. In that moment, she stands at a crossroads between compassion and self-preservation, the weight of love and betrayal pressing heavy on her heart.

AITA for telling my parents i will not be helping them with their rent?













As renowned family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner explains, “When we try to change other people, we usually fail. When we change ourselves, we change the dynamics of the relationship.” This principle directly applies to the OP’s situation, where attempts to change the parents’ past behavior are impossible, making the necessary change one of setting and enforcing firm personal boundaries.
The OP, at 18, has successfully achieved financial independence after experiencing emotional abuse, a significant accomplishment under duress. The request for the OP to liquidate their college savings to cover their parents’ rent shifts the responsibility for the parents’ financial instability onto the victim of past mistreatment. The family’s response—involving the grandmother, repeated calls from the aunt, and threats of being cut off—is a clear pattern of emotional coercion and triangulation designed to override the OP’s established boundaries. This tactic exploits the OP’s potential relational guilt to force compliance, which is particularly damaging given the prior abusive relationship.
The friend’s assessment that the OP is ‘taking it too far’ reflects a common societal bias that prioritizes the abstract concept of filial duty over the concrete reality of emotional safety and self-preservation, especially when abuse is involved. The OP’s initial refusal was appropriate for maintaining their established boundaries. Moving forward, the most constructive action is to limit contact with the pressuring members (aunt and potentially grandmother regarding this specific issue) and to reaffirm that financial decisions are directly tied to their personal safety plan, not a negotiable debt owed to the parents.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.





























The original poster (OP) firmly maintains their decision to withhold financial assistance from their parents, citing past emotional abuse and the fact that their savings are entirely self-earned through hard work as an independent adult. The central conflict is the clash between the OP’s established boundaries aimed at self-preservation and the family’s expectation that the OP owes them financial support as repayment for raising them.
Given a history of abuse and the OP’s successful establishment of independence, is the family’s demand for financial aid justified by the act of raising the OP, or should the OP’s right to protect their personal, self-funded future take absolute precedence over familial obligation?







