At just nineteen, she found herself standing at a crossroads between independence and control, where love from her parents came wrapped in digital chains. The Life360 app, once a symbol of their care, had become a relentless reminder of their grip, suffocating her desire to carve out her own path in a world she was eager to explore.
When she chose to follow her heart and switch her major to nursing, she didn’t just change careers—she sparked a battle for her autonomy, paying the price in silence and self-reliance. Now, with every deleted app and unanswered call, she fights not just for her dreams but for the freedom to live them on her own terms.

AITA for refusing to give my parents my location after they stopped paying for my tuition?







A young college student is working two jobs to pay for her own education after her parents withdrew their support. They stopped paying for her school because they did not like her choice of major.
Even though she is now financially independent, her parents still want to track her location at all times. When she deleted the tracking app, they told her she was no longer welcome at Thanksgiving.
Dr. Elizabeth Fishel, a journalist and expert on family relationships who wrote “Getting to 30,” explains that parents often struggle to stop monitoring their children during the transition to adulthood. In this case, the parents are using emotional pressure to maintain control that they previously held through financial support. Their insistence on tracking her location suggests they do not yet see her as an independent adult capable of managing her own safety.
The threat to exclude the daughter from Thanksgiving is a form of emotional manipulation. Since they can no longer use money to influence her decisions, they are using her connection to the family as a bargaining chip. This behavior ignores the fact that the daughter is now paying for her own life and has a right to set boundaries regarding her privacy.
It is my professional opinion that the daughter’s actions are appropriate. She is paying for her own life and deserves to be treated as an adult. Setting this boundary is a healthy part of growing up. She could try to talk to them about her safety plans to show she is being responsible, but she should not feel forced to turn the app back on.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.

>Then came the calls from both my parents, both of them saying how dangerous it is for me to not be tracked by them all the time. How the hell do they think all the generations who came before survived?





https://www.reddit.com/u/Deflated_Hypnotist/s/BOp4Y9uQVh









The student is now financially independent and responsible for her own life, yet her parents continue to demand control through location tracking. She faces a conflict between her need for personal privacy as an adult and her parents’ conditional requirements for family inclusion.
Is it appropriate for parents to demand constant surveillance of an adult child who pays for their own life, or is the daughter’s refusal to be tracked a necessary step in establishing her independence?







