For three years, she had quietly held the fragile trust of a friend, watching over their child with a heart full of patience and sacrifice. Though paid less than she deserved, she accepted the modest wage out of loyalty and understanding, balancing her own dreams while caring for someone else’s future.
But when fortune struck and the lottery winnings transformed her friend’s life, the stark truth of her own worth became undeniable. Despite the newfound wealth and luxuries, her plea for fair pay was met with cold refusal, shattering the quiet bond and forcing her to reclaim her dignity by walking away from a role she once embraced with love.

AITA for quitting on my friend because she won the lottery?










As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a classic boundary negotiation complicated by both a change in financial status and a long-standing informal agreement.
The OP was operating under an implicit agreement where the low pay was offset by the ease of the job and the ability to study. However, the friend’s lottery win fundamentally altered the financial context, making the OP’s continued acceptance of sub-minimum wage unfair and unsustainable, regardless of the friend’s need. The friend’s refusal to increase pay after acquiring significant wealth suggests a resistance to updating the relationship parameters, potentially stemming from entitlement or a desire to maintain control/benefit from the previous arrangement. The OP’s decision to quit, while partly motivated by frustration and perhaps jealousy, is fundamentally a necessary step to assert professional boundaries and demand equitable compensation.
The OP was appropriate in seeking fair compensation (minimum wage) rather than price-gouging, but the execution—quitting outright—created an immediate crisis for the friend. A more constructive approach would have involved a formal written proposal outlining the new rate required to continue, effective 30 days out. This gives the friend a final chance to meet the professional standard before the service ends, separating the business decision from personal vindictiveness.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.
































The original poster (OP) finds themselves in a difficult position, having provided reliable, underpaid childcare for three years. The core conflict arises when the friend receives a significant financial windfall but refuses to adjust the compensation to at least minimum wage, leading the OP to terminate the arrangement.
Is the OP justified in prioritizing fair compensation, even if the termination causes significant inconvenience to the friend, or does the history of friendship and the friend’s past financial situation warrant continued leniency despite the new wealth?







