She has carried the weight of his dreams on her shoulders, tirelessly fighting to pull him out of the dark spiral of unemployment that has consumed him for eight long months. Every job lead sent, résumé updated, and alarm set was a testament to her hope, but also a quiet plea for him to wake up and fight alongside her.
Yet, when exhaustion finally broke her spirit, she chose to let him face the consequences alone, hoping it would spark the fire he had lost. Instead, it shattered their fragile bond, leaving her drowning in guilt while he cast blame, both trapped in a painful silence neither knows how to escape.

AITAH for not waking up my boyfriend for his dream job interview because I was tired of being his alarm clock?







As noted by clinical psychologist Dr. Terri Apter regarding relationship dynamics and dependency, ‘When one partner takes on the role of manager or parent, the underlying partnership balance is disrupted, often leading to resentment in the caregiver and stunted growth in the dependent partner.’ This situation clearly illustrates a shift in roles where the girlfriend (OP) has taken on the ‘parenting’ role of ensuring her boyfriend meets basic responsibilities, fueled by necessity.
The OP’s emotional state, described as feeling ‘drained,’ indicates severe caregiver burnout and resentment. By intentionally failing to wake him up, she enacted a boundary test, forcing him to confront the consequences of his inaction. While missing the interview was a direct negative outcome for him, her action was a reaction to his failure to prioritize his own stated goals over his current coping mechanisms (gaming, oversleeping). His accusation of ‘sabotage’ is a projection, avoiding accountability for his own choices.
From a psychological standpoint, the OP’s action was an extreme, albeit emotionally driven, attempt to establish a necessary boundary regarding emotional labor and shared responsibility. However, this passive-aggressive enforcement is usually less effective than direct communication. Moving forward, the constructive recommendation is for the OP to clearly communicate that her role is supportive (providing leads, resume help) but not supervisory (waking him up for appointments). If he cannot meet self-imposed deadlines without her intervention, the couple must address the relationship’s sustainability, potentially with couples counseling.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.
















The writer is experiencing significant internal conflict, torn between the guilt of withdrawing support and the exhaustion felt from carrying the entire financial and motivational burden for nearly a year. The central tension lies in the clash between the boyfriend’s expectation that she must actively manage his job search, regardless of her own limits, and her need to establish personal boundaries due to burnout.
Given that the boyfriend missed a crucial interview because he was not woken up, is it fair to place the entire responsibility for his job search—including waking him up—on the partner, especially when that partner is managing all financial pressures? Where should the line be drawn between support and enabling behavior in a relationship facing prolonged unemployment?







