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Mom Makes Teen Son Volunteer At Zoo After His Insulting Comment About Zookeepers

by Jeffrey Stone
December 3, 2025
in Social Issues

A divorced mom’s zoo trip flipped when her 16-year-old son mocked a zookeeper scooping poop: “Study hard or end up like that!” Cringe hit peak, so she volunteered him for a week of muck duty. Dad screams overkill, kid whines torture.

Redditors split: tough-love win or epic backfire? The thread’s roasting teen snark, humility hacks, and sticky family fights.

Mom forces snarky teen to volunteer at zoo after rude remark.

Mom Makes Teen Son Volunteer At Zoo After His Insulting Comment About Zookeepers
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for making my son (16M) volunteer at the zoo, after he made some rude comments?'

I'm divorced but I have primary custody of my three kids, 16, 12, and 8. Last week I took them all to the zoo, and it was mostly a good...

The two younger kids especially liked it, but my oldest is isn't very fond of animals.

We passed a zookeeper working hard cleaning a giraffe exhibit, and to my surprise my 16-year-old son pointed and said to his brother

"That's why you do good in school I guess, or you end up scooping poop for a job!"

He said it loud too, the keeper and nearby guests surely heard. I was very embarrassed.

I quickly led them away and left the zoo soon after, and asked him where he learned to talk like that.

I said "that's not even true, don't many of them have master's degrees and higher?"

But he said he thinks it's gross menial work for people who don't want to work with their intellect, and "anyone could do it."

(referencing enclosure cleaning, I assume). I was pretty appalled by how he's learned to look down on manual labor but particularly zookeeping,

because as I understand, it's not even "easy" - sure it's manual labor, but I don't think I could do what those zookeepers do every day,

I gag from our cat's litterbox alone! I thought the best way to teach him more respect and appreciation was to sign him up to volunteer at the zoo,

so that's what I did. I found a "zookeeper for a week" program at a zoo not far from here and enrolled him.

When I told him he was very upset and said "why would you do that, that sounds awful."

I told him I thought he'd said it was 'easy,' so surely just one week wouldn't hurt,

but he said "yeah cleaning up messes is 'easy' in that anyone can do it but that doesn't mean I want to!"

His father thinks this was too harsh when he found out (I'm guessing some of his sentiments may be influencing these attitudes)

but I decided to stick with it. AITA?

Tl;dr: son has negative insulting attitude towards zookeepers and manual labor and embarrassed me at the zoo -

I'm forcing him to volunteer at a zoo for a week

In this Reddit story, mom’s quick-thinking punishment – enrolling her snarky teen in a zoo volunteer program – aims to flip his disdain for zookeeping into appreciation, but it’s sparking debate on whether tough love cleans up attitudes or just spreads the mess.

From one angle, the son’s comment reeks of unchecked privilege. He dismissed zookeeping as brainless grunt work anyone could do, ignoring the grit, knowledge, and passion involved. Mom’s move forces hands-on experience, potentially shattering illusions.

Opposing views highlight the risk: a reluctant volunteer might sulk, slack off, or worsen attitudes among staff already juggling beasts and budgets.

His quip about it being “easy but undesirable” underscores a teen’s classic dodge – admitting simplicity without wanting the sweat.

Motivations run deep here. The son, possibly echoing dad’s influence in a split household, mirrors broader teen snobbery toward blue-collar roles.

Mom, gagging at cat litter yet defending pros who handle giraffe-sized challenges, wants to instill respect early.

It’s satirical how a zoo outing meant for bonding became a battlefield over labor dignity.

Zooming out, this taps into societal snubs against manual jobs. A 2023 Bureau of Labor Statistics report notes animal care workers often hold advanced degrees, with median pay around $30,000 but requiring biology expertise and physical stamina.

Yet stigma persists, as a Pew Research study found 52% of Americans view trade skills as undervalued despite demand. This family’s fiasco spotlights how kids absorb class biases, urging parents to bridge empathy gaps before they widen.

It’s hard to have a shared morality when you don’t have a shared reality, as parenting psychologist Richard Weissbourd suggests in a Washington Post article on fostering empathy in children, emphasizing the role of perspective-taking and ethical action: “They may fiercely disagree, but it is a matter of listening and trying to take other people’s perspective and valuing other people as human beings.”

This insight aligns perfectly with the mom’s approach, as the son’s dismissive remark reveals a lack of “shared reality” about zookeeping’s demands, turning a fun outing into a teachable clash.

Yet, as Weissbourd notes, even amid disagreements, like the dad’s view of the punishment as too harsh, empathy thrives through active valuation, not avoidance.

This could mean mom facilitating zoo chats where her son hears keepers’ stories firsthand, weaving disagreement into dialogue and building a moral compass that honors all labor.

To avoid pitfalls, Weissbourd’s guidance suggests supervised immersion to nurture that ethical empathy without backlash.

Mom tagging along for the first shift, as suggested, could model this: observing her son’s discomfort, validating it briefly (“This is tougher than it looks, huh?”), then guiding questions like “What surprised you about the keeper’s routine?”

Such steps turn potential resentment into relational growth, proving that empathy isn’t innate but cultivated through these brave, reality-sharing moments.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Some say the punishment fits the rude comment perfectly.

fruitcakeslaps − NTA Making him do the work will make him realise how hard a lot of these jobs are actually are,

and the amount of effort people put into what they do. The jobs we might see as undesirable are the ones that keep a lot of systems running.

To make that comment loudly in front of the zookeeper is just harsh.

Edit: Thank you kind stranger for the award!

ReasonableCookie9369 − NTA gotta nip that attitude in the bud early.

DiamondHeist1970 − NTA This is a classic case of the punishment fitting the crime. And "picking up giraffe poop" is a well sort after job.

At least he will have a better idea of what is involved a greater understanding of what it takes to look after animals.

I would laugh if he came home after that week and decide to work in the zoo "when he grows up".

Meanwhile, others call it YTA for burdening zoo staff with a resentful teen.

MelodicCarpenter7 − YTA - volunteers who don’t want to be there often just create more work for the employees.

Those kind of opportunities are for people who genuinely want to volunteer, not to discipline your children

Dry-Spring5230 − YTA what did those poor zookeepers do to you that you want to punish them by inflicting your son's bad attitude on them? A

nd what exactly is he supposed to learn? That a 16 year old can do this job, it just smells bad? Wouldn't that support his position?

sweetlife04 − YTA. Someone who doesn’t want to be there makes it incredibly difficult for anyone else who is there -

the zoo employees running the program and other genuine volunteers.

You’ll prove your point I guess but you’re likely to ruin a lot of other peoples time.

If you really feel the need to go ahead I’d speak to the person/people running the program first

so they are aware of why you’ve enrolled him in a volunteer program - tbh, if I was running it I would decline having him there.

Some worry the plan will backfire or harm volunteers.

Novel-Problem − NTA. That attitude anywhere in life is absolutely disgusting.

That being said, my only thoughts would be of concern for the keepers who will be responsible for supervising him for a week.

I’ve been in a situation where I’ve had to supervise people who thought the work was “boring and menial” and copped a lot of attitude for it

No_FunFundie − YTA, although it’s a very soft YTA. Here’s why: all you’re doing is taking your son’s bad attitude and making it the problem

of the employees at the zoo, ie the very people he wants to denigrate. Are you going to be there to make sure he isn’t disrespectful?

If you aren’t, he’s probably going to behave very badly or at least not do the work.

Personally I’d take the kid to one of those ask a zookeeper events and I’d go with him

to ensure he doesn’t speak poorly or create issues and pointedly ask about their schooling, qualifications, and etc.

I think your attitude is absolutely correct but I also think when we punish or correct children

we have to make sure not to essentially foist them onto someone else

especially if that someone else is someone they will not respect or will be belligerent to.

That said, since the sign up is done, maybe you can see if you can go with him to make sure

that he behaves and those questions get answered? At least for the first day or something.

SlartieB − YTA because zookeeping is actually pretty exclusive, and your son's s__t attitude is going to ruin the experience

for those people who actually WANT to be there. You aren't going to get through to him this way, you're going to make him resent you.

Some suggest alternative empathy-building methods.

Mysterious_Bridge_61 − ESH. You want to dump your rude teenager on the zoo employees? So he can be more rude to them?

I would certainly want to teach him, but I'm not sure this is the way. Overall look for ways to increase empathy for all people.

Teach him not to say rude comments where people can hear them. Give him opportunities for work including physical work.

This zoo volunteer saga leaves us pondering life’s wilder lessons: Do you think the mom’s poop-scooping mandate was a genius stroke for teaching respect, or did it risk dumping drama on innocent keepers?

How would you handle a teen’s snobby slip-up without turning family outings into battlegrounds? Share your hot takes!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jeffrey brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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