From the earliest memories, a child clung to the image of their mother as a hero, a beacon of love amid a turbulent sea of instability. Yet beneath the surface of that fragile devotion lay the cracks of a life marked by constant upheaval—an endless cycle of jobs taken and abandoned, dreams chased and discarded, leaving behind a trail of financial chaos and emotional uncertainty.
As innocence gave way to harsh reality, the protective bubble finally burst. The child who once saw only a loving mother now grappled with the painful understanding of sacrifice and survival, of borrowed money and broken promises. The story unfolds as a raw testament to resilience, heartbreak, and the complex bonds that bind family, even when trust is stretched to its limits.

Mom freaks out after I tell her I, an intern living by myself, can’t really afford to buy gourmet cat food every month for her.












Dr. Ramani Durvasula, a clinical psychologist specializing in narcissistic personality disorder, often discusses the concept of ‘financial infidelity’ and the long-term impact of parental financial dependency on adult children. In this case, the situation extends beyond simple financial requests; it demonstrates a long-established pattern of emotional and fiscal enmeshment rooted in the mother’s need for high-status maintenance at the expense of her child’s well-being.
The mother’s behavior—demanding expensive, gourmet pet food and rejecting lower-status employment—suggests a fragile ego heavily invested in external validation (high standards of living). This pattern forces the adult child into the role of perpetual provider, a dynamic established during childhood when the parent’s instability required the child to prematurely take on adult financial burdens. The student’s current life—living sparsely on an engineering internship—highlights the direct, negative long-term consequences of this past emotional labor and financial extraction. The mother’s implied threat regarding the cats further demonstrates manipulative tactics designed to induce guilt and ensure compliance.
The graduate student’s decision to move out and seek therapy shows a critical step toward establishing necessary boundaries. However, the continued requests, especially regarding discretionary, high-cost items like premium cat food, indicate the boundary is not fully internalized by the mother. Moving forward, the most constructive approach is to transition from being a primary financial safety net to offering only defined, needs-based support (e.g., actual necessities for the cats, perhaps structured monthly) while firmly refusing demands that support the mother’s unsustainable lifestyle choices. The student must prioritize their own education and financial foundation above mitigating the mother’s self-inflicted crises.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.
![[deleted] $200 rent. if only. i'm struggling to find $600...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/11da634f3744c7bde0821e559dc0044d.png)
![[deleted] She's this awful, I really don't see a reason...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/2fa21072910b4f7bcef2929b5e972c9f.png)
![[deleted] ... r/raisedbynarcissists](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/2ba0181c8ca3b448c9cc0e7c1cb24bef.png)
![[deleted] I'm really sorry you're having to deal with this....](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/0f79a0c8b376aa714b82325cc5a19dea.png)



The individual is caught between a deep sense of familial duty, shaped by a difficult childhood, and the necessity of establishing personal financial independence. The central conflict lies in the mother’s persistent sense of entitlement and inability to manage finances responsibly, directly clashing with the graduate student’s very limited resources and need for self-preservation.
Given the history of financial exploitation and emotional manipulation, should the individual completely sever financial support to protect their own stability, or is there an ethical obligation to continue assisting the mother, even minimally, due to the shared history and her apparent instability?







