When a family loses everything, the bonds that hold them together are tested in the harshest ways. A father and his teenage son, displaced and vulnerable, find refuge in a home offered out of love but shadowed by unwelcome conditions. The weight of past sacrifices clashes with present expectations, stirring up old wounds and unspoken resentments within the fractured family.
Amidst the struggle to rebuild and provide, the delicate balance of care and fairness begins to unravel. A mother’s silent sacrifices contrast sharply with a father’s sense of pride and entitlement, igniting a conflict that threatens to fracture the fragile sanctuary they all desperately need. In this story, love is both a gift and a battleground, where generosity meets the complex realities of family loyalty.

AITA for charging rent from my dad but not from my mom?











As renowned family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner states, “When we try to change people who are not ready to change, we often end up feeling frustrated, angry, and exhausted.” This situation clearly illustrates the difficulty of establishing new family boundaries when past resentments and established roles clash with current needs.
The OP is operating from a place of care, demonstrated by providing housing and covering all of the mother’s living expenses as repayment for past support. However, the father interprets this act of care toward the mother as favoritism, likely triggering underlying feelings related to his past treatment of the OP (charging rent while she was ill). His demand for reduced rent is less about the actual cost and more about asserting a perceived right or achieving parity with the mother’s situation, which he views through a lens of entitlement rather than one of gratitude for accommodation.
Regarding the grocery request, the dynamic shifts from landlord/tenant to caregiver expectations. Since the father has a 50-year-old wife and a 15-year-old son present, expecting the OP’s husband to take on that labor instead of the immediate family unit is an overreach. The OP’s actions regarding rent are defensible as they are balancing different financial and emotional debts owed to each parent. A constructive path forward involves the OP clearly communicating that the housing arrangement is a temporary, business-like rental agreement for the father’s family, separate from the non-monetary support given to the mother, and that personal errands must be managed by his own household members.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.



























The original poster (OP) is navigating a complex situation involving providing shelter to their recently homeless father and his family while managing existing family responsibilities with their mother. The central conflict stems from the father’s perception of unequal treatment regarding rent structure for his temporary housing compared to the OP’s mother, who lives rent-free, and his expectation that the OP’s husband should provide grocery services due to the father’s age.
Does the OP have an obligation to reduce or waive rent for their father’s family, given that they charge market rate rent, or is maintaining a consistent, tenant-based financial arrangement fair given past history and current resource allocation? Furthermore, is the father justified in expecting personal assistance, such as grocery shopping, from the OP’s husband?







