A single mother’s heart is stretched thin, trying to guide her eldest son through the turbulent storm of adulthood. Despite her love and clear boundaries meant for safety and respect, her 18-year-old battles inner demons of anger and irresponsibility, creating a chasm filled with frustration and pain between them.
As he lashes out with irrational fury and defiance, insisting on his newfound independence, the fragile thread of their relationship frays further. Each harsh word and reckless choice leaves wounds that cut deep, leaving her to wrestle with the heartbreaking reality of a son who struggles to understand the weight of his actions on the family they both hold dear.

AITA for sending my son to stay with his dad because he left the door unlocked?































As noted by family systems expert Dr. Murray Bowen, differentiation of self—the ability to maintain one’s own principles while remaining emotionally connected to the family unit—is crucial, especially when adult children live at home. This situation highlights a severe lack of differentiation on both sides: the son refuses to adhere to basic safety standards expected in any shared living situation, while the mother struggles to enforce essential boundaries against an adult who claims autonomy.
The core conflict is not simply about a missed chore (locking the door) but about accountability and emotional safety. The son’s explosive anger and name-calling when confronted—behavior he acknowledges and is purportedly addressing in therapy—constitutes emotional abuse and violates the basic contract of mutual respect in a shared home. The potential ADHD diagnosis, while important context for understanding executive function deficits (like remembering to lock a door), does not excuse the subsequent aggressive reaction or the repeated dangerous negligence. The mother’s decision to temporarily remove him, especially after multiple safety incidents involving open doors, appears to be a necessary, albeit painful, act of self-preservation for herself and her other dependents.
The mother’s action to create immediate distance was appropriate for restoring safety and breaking the cycle of enabling the behavior through continued stressful cohabitation. Moving forward, the constructive recommendation is for the mother to establish a formalized, written agreement with the son (and ideally involving his father and therapist) that clearly outlines mandatory behavioral and safety standards. Consequences for breaches must be pre-agreed upon and consistently applied, focusing on privileges tied to demonstrated responsibility rather than emotional reaction.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

He’s endangering your and your other children’s safety and possessions. His continued inability (unwillingness?) to take responsibility is very childish. He says he’s an adult not? Fine, then take responsibility for your actions! I suggest you change the locks.











The mother is heartbroken, fearful for her family’s safety, and angry that a recurring, preventable lapse in responsibility led to a significant event—the loss of a pet. Her action of sending her adult son to his father’s home was a direct response to an immediate safety breach coupled with ongoing, emotionally volatile behavior that eroded her sense of security within her own house.
Given the son’s documented anger issues, his status as a legal adult living at home, and the direct threat to safety posed by his negligence, is the mother justified in prioritizing immediate household safety and emotional well-being over maintaining the cohabitation arrangement, or does her recourse primarily lie in mandated professional intervention, given his ongoing therapy?







