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Exhausted Father Closes The Bank Of Dad, Outraged Adult Children Demand Their Free Allowances
Middle-aged man in glasses and burgundy sweater showing exhaustion and frustration indoors near whiteboard.

YOU WONT BELIEVE: Wife kids money relationship - What They Never Told You

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We all love a good “hard work pays off in the end” story. That is until the person who did all the hard work decides they’re done grinding like a machine. Then the vibe dives real quick. Especially if certain people got a little too accustomed to the lifestyle it afforded them.

One guy turned to an online community to vent after decades of physically tough work left him exhausted but still labeled “lazy” by his own family. His crime? Wanting a regular 9-5 in an office, but only after funding everyone else’s comfy life from day one. 

More info: Reddit

RELATED:

    Working brutal hours for years might sound admirable, until everyone starts expecting you to never, ever stop

    Image credits: gpointstudio / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    After decades of overtime, sweat, and sacrifice, one dad thought he’d finally earned the right to slow down a little

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    Image credits: bokodi / Freepik (not the actual photo)

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    With the kids grown and the mortgage gone, he took a lower-paying job with better hours and less stress and strain

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    Image credits: freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)

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    Instead of support, though, his wife and adult kids accused him of being selfish and even “cruel” for wanting to cut back

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    Image credits:

    Now he’s set a boundary, telling his wife to get a job if she wants to keep funding their kids’ lavish lifestyles, but still asked netizens if that makes him a jerk

    The original poster (OP) spent year after year (after year) working what most people would call an absolutely brutal schedule. Six weeks straight of 12-hour days, followed by just three weeks off, all to make sure his family never had to worry about money. It wasn’t glamorous, but it paid the bills, and then some.

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    That sacrifice meant OP’s wife could stay home full-time, taking care of the house and raising their kids. Meanwhile, his income covered everything: the mortgage, living expenses, college funds, retirement savings, emergency funds, brand-new cars, you name it. Safe to say, this wasn’t just scraping by; it was full-on financial stability.

    Now 55, OP says his body is worn down, and honestly, not in a “I need a spa day” kind of way, more like “I physically cannot keep doing this forever.” So, with both kids grown, educated, and employed, he decided to apply for a less demanding office role at his company. Then he actually landed it.

    The only catch? While the hourly rate is better, his income nosedives without the overtime. Still, he figured it was time; to him, this is what year after year of grind bought him. To his family? Not so much. So, after they branded him “lazy,” he went online to ask if wanting to ease off makes him a jerk.

    Instead of celebrating the fact that he can finally breathe a little, OP’s wife and (adult) kids seem more focused on what’s no longer going to be flowing into their bank accounts. That’s where things get messy, because this isn’t really about money anymore; it’s about expectations and entitlement.

    Image credits: prostock-studio / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    Psychologists often talk about “lifestyle creep,” where people gradually get used to a higher standard of living, to the point where it starts feeling par for the course. In OP’s case, decades of comfy living have quietly reset his family’s expectations, which is why they’re complaining so loudly now.

    Experts say transitions like this can create tension, especially when adult children are still financially dependent or emotionally tied to that support system. Letting go of that dynamic isn’t always smooth sailing – something OP’s finding out the hard way.

    Then there’s the issue of financial boundaries. Relationship pros say couples often clash when one partner feels their contributions are being taken for granted. When expectations around money aren’t clearly aligned, resentment builds fast. OP doesn’t seem that uptight about finances, but his wife clearly is. 

    You see, long-term overwork doesn’t just impact energy levels; it can have serious physical and mental health consequences too. Specialists warn that constantly pushing through exhaustion for can lead to chronic issues. So, slowing down isn’t laziness, it’s survival. And OP’s (deservedly) desperate for it.

    This doesn’t look like a man “walking away from responsibility,” it’s more like someone finally putting the brakes on being everyone else’s financial safety net. Funny how his sacrifice was expected, but his exhaustion is negotiable. What’s your take? Has OP done enough, or should he keep his nose against the grindstone for his kids? Tell us in the comments!

    In the comments, readers agreed that the original poster was definitely not the jerk in the scenario and slammed his family for acting so entitled

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    Ivan Ayliffe

    Ivan Ayliffe

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

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    After twenty years in advertising, I've decided to try my hand at journalism. I'm lucky enough to be based in Cape Town, South Africa and use every opportunity I get to explore everything it has to offer, both indoors and out. When I'm not reading, writing, or listening to podcasts, I spend my time swimming in the ocean, running mountain trails, and skydiving. While I haven't travelled as much as I'd like, I did live in !ndia, which was an incredible experience. Oh, and I love live music. I hope you enjoy my stories!

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    Ivan Ayliffe

    Ivan Ayliffe

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    After twenty years in advertising, I've decided to try my hand at journalism. I'm lucky enough to be based in Cape Town, South Africa and use every opportunity I get to explore everything it has to offer, both indoors and out. When I'm not reading, writing, or listening to podcasts, I spend my time swimming in the ocean, running mountain trails, and skydiving. While I haven't travelled as much as I'd like, I did live in !ndia, which was an incredible experience. Oh, and I love live music. I hope you enjoy my stories!

    What do you think ?
    Juls
    Community Member
    20 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Those girls have chosen careers that make much less money than their father made. That's legit. The world needs teachers and social workers. But now they have to adjust what they want to fit the scale of their earnings. Dad's not going to be the provider forever, and he is eventually going to retire. Wife and kids are being unreasonable. It looks like Dad made life a little too easy for everyone, and now they are going to have to adapt.

    Janelle Collard
    Community Member
    Premium
    20 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP is NTA. If wifey and kids don't like his working less, oh well. 🤷‍♀️ Wifey should've had a job long before this.

    tori Ohno
    Community Member
    13 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She should have had at least a part time job when both kids were in elementary school. I won't call her a freeloader because her mother and his probably were SAHMs because of the era, but things change.

    Load More Replies...
    Sparky Hughes
    Community Member
    Premium
    19 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    When my youngest stepson graduated he thought he would just live with us until he got his “dream job”. We said no, he’d have to pay rent so he went to his mom’s. Thank goodness for him his coddling mom (prob due to her husband) put her foot down after babying him. He was 24 and after getting hired he had no clue the paperwork would entail entering his social security number and thought it was fraud. We help our kids for emergencies and have even taken paybacks. We save that money and invest it. We now can “lend” it free and clear and are grateful they are getting financial responsibility. I think it’s helped I had to grow up fast and work hard because hubby was going down the same road as his ex with the coddling

    Load More Comments
    Juls
    Community Member
    20 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Those girls have chosen careers that make much less money than their father made. That's legit. The world needs teachers and social workers. But now they have to adjust what they want to fit the scale of their earnings. Dad's not going to be the provider forever, and he is eventually going to retire. Wife and kids are being unreasonable. It looks like Dad made life a little too easy for everyone, and now they are going to have to adapt.

    Janelle Collard
    Community Member
    Premium
    20 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP is NTA. If wifey and kids don't like his working less, oh well. 🤷‍♀️ Wifey should've had a job long before this.

    tori Ohno
    Community Member
    13 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She should have had at least a part time job when both kids were in elementary school. I won't call her a freeloader because her mother and his probably were SAHMs because of the era, but things change.

    Load More Replies...
    Sparky Hughes
    Community Member
    Premium
    19 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    When my youngest stepson graduated he thought he would just live with us until he got his “dream job”. We said no, he’d have to pay rent so he went to his mom’s. Thank goodness for him his coddling mom (prob due to her husband) put her foot down after babying him. He was 24 and after getting hired he had no clue the paperwork would entail entering his social security number and thought it was fraud. We help our kids for emergencies and have even taken paybacks. We save that money and invest it. We now can “lend” it free and clear and are grateful they are getting financial responsibility. I think it’s helped I had to grow up fast and work hard because hubby was going down the same road as his ex with the coddling

    Load More Comments
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