In the quiet struggle of survival, an eighteen-year-old found himself the reluctant pillar of a family burdened by poverty and unspoken expectations. His mother, an immigrant chasing the American dream, leaned heavily on his fragile shoulders, blurring the lines between support and entitlement, love and obligation.
As he fought to carve out a future for himself, the weight of sacrifice pressed down, twisting moments of hope into painful confrontations. The promise of escape through education became a battlefield where loyalty clashed with self-preservation, leaving him torn between the family he loved and the life he yearned to claim.

AITAH for secretly planning to leave my family after overhearing a conversation?



















As renowned psychologist Dr. Carl Rogers explains, ‘The only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to learn; the one who has adapted and changed in the light of greater knowledge.’ This situation highlights a critical breakdown in the relationship dynamic, where one party (the OP) has adapted and grown independently, while the other parties (mother and sister) are operating under an outdated transactional model of the relationship.
The OP’s history of caretaking, driven by love and necessity given the family’s past poverty, has inadvertently fostered a sense of entitlement in the mother and sister. When the OP attempted to establish a boundary (withholding the paycheck for school), the family reacted with rage and possessiveness, confirming the OP’s fear that their success would be immediately co-opted. The overheard conversation solidifies that the family views the OP not as an independent adult pursuing their own future, but as an investment whose returns must be collected, including ‘interest.’ This dynamic shifts the emotional labor and financial burden entirely onto the OP.
The OP’s desire to pursue estrangement is a severe but understandable response to what feels like an inescapable financial and emotional trap. The actions taken so far (pursuing prestigious programs) are appropriate for self-advancement. However, immediate, complete estrangement might not be the only or most effective initial step, especially given the financial dependency/constraint. A constructive first step would be to clearly and calmly articulate firm, non-negotiable financial boundaries regarding future earnings, potentially coupled with seeking external support networks (like university resources or social services) to fund the study abroad program, thereby reducing the immediate leverage the family holds before initiating deeper relational changes.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.













































The original poster (OP) is facing a severe conflict rooted in long-standing family expectations of financial support, which they feel have turned into entitlement from their mother and sister. The OP’s realization of their potential and their desire to pursue higher education abroad clashes directly with the family’s perceived claim on their future earnings.
Given the realization that the family plans to leverage the OP’s future career for repayment with interest, is it justifiable for the OP to pursue estrangement as a means of self-preservation and achieving their educational and life goals?







