A young man, freshly out of college and searching for his path, returns to his hometown with hope and a willingness to support his struggling parents. The weight of their hardships during the pandemic presses on him, and he sacrifices his independence to move back home, ready to help shoulder the burden.
But the sanctuary he sought becomes a battleground of control and resentment. His mother’s rigid rules and harsh punishments transform his home into a prison, stifling his adulthood and dreams. Faced with this suffocating reality, he takes a stand and reaches out for the freedom he thought he had lost.

AITA for moving back out after my parents demanded I follow their rules








As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a severe boundary failure rooted in a transactional ambiguity. The parents invited the OP back under the premise of financial support, suggesting an adult-to-adult arrangement where the OP is a tenant paying rent. However, the mother’s immediate enforcement of a curfew, stating, “your living under my roof, I make the rules,” instantly reverted the relationship to a parent-child dynamic, invalidating the financial agreement.
The OP’s reaction—moving out immediately after being ‘grounded’—was an emotional response to a perceived betrayal of the agreed-upon terms. While the OP asserted adult independence, the abrupt exit, while understandable given the disrespect shown, bypassed essential steps in adult conflict resolution. When financial arrangements are mixed with familial ties, clear, written agreements regarding house rules, rent payment, and expected autonomy are crucial to prevent such rapid escalation.
The OP’s actions, while stemming from a valid need for autonomy, were perhaps overly reactive given the parents’ reported financial strain. A more constructive approach would have involved immediately confronting the mother using ‘I’ statements about the rental agreement (e.g., ‘I am an adult paying rent, and a curfew is not part of our agreement’) followed by a formal discussion about revised expectations. Future situations require establishing boundaries *before* moving in, defining roles clearly as tenant/landlord or adult co-habitant, rather than allowing the relationship structure to default to outdated familial power structures.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.























The original poster (OP) agreed to move home to financially support their parents following difficulties caused by the pandemic. However, this arrangement quickly devolved when the parents attempted to impose parental rules, such as setting a curfew for screen time, despite the OP being an adult and a paying renter. The core conflict arises from the clash between the OP’s expectation of autonomy as a paying tenant and the parents’ insistence on retaining traditional parental authority based on the residence being their property.
Considering the OP acted as a paying adult but was treated as a dependent child, was the OP justified in immediately moving out upon being treated without respect for their contractual obligations, or should they have attempted further negotiation or mediation to establish clear boundaries first?







