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College Student Snaps At Mom’s Boyfriend After Being Told To Babysit His Kid

by Layla Bui
November 11, 2025
in Social Issues

Juggling college stress is hard enough without unexpected family drama thrown into the mix. For one student, all he wanted was a quiet weekend to finish a big project until his mom’s boyfriend decided otherwise.

When asked to watch an 11-year-old he barely knows, he drew a firm line and said what many wouldn’t dare to: that the kid simply isn’t his responsibility. His honesty left both adults offended, but was he wrong to stand up for himself? Keep reading to find out how one small argument revealed big cracks in this family dynamic.

College student snaps after mom’s boyfriend expects him to babysit his 11-year-old son, saying the kid isn’t his responsibility

College Student Snaps At Mom’s Boyfriend After Being Told To Babysit His Kid
not the actual photo

'AITA for telling my mom's boyfriend his son is not my responsibility?'

My (M20) parents divorced when I was 16, and it was messy.

I live with my mom now and, her boyfriend "Mark" (43), and Marks son "Liam" (11).

I'm in my second year of college, which is its own special kind of stress with exams and projects.

The dynamic is fine, usually. Mark is okay, but he has a habit of assuming I'm a newly acquired babysitter.

Liam is a good kid, but wasn't raised properly (which is another entire thing)

and he's just 11, he's energetic, loud, and is very impersonal and doesn't understand the concept of personal space yet.

The issue happened this past Saturday. I had a massive assignment due on Monday morning,

and I was planning on spending the entire weekend at the library on campus.

On Saturday morning, as I'm packing my bag, Mark comes to me to let me know he and my mom are going away and I need to keep an eye...

I was immediately stressed, so I told him I can't and that I have to go to uni to focus on my uni work.

He waved me off and said its fine and i should take him along with me to campus and keep him busy on the tablet.

Immediately I was liek f__k no, im not taking an 11 year old kid to my university while I need to focus on a big submission.

I said no, trying to be firm, saying that I cannot be responsible for him for an entire day at my uni,

and I asked if he couldn't stay at a friend's or at his grandma's or mom's.

Marks face fell and he looked genuinely annoyed. He told me it's just one day and that trying to organise stuff with other parents

and family would be too much of a hassle, and that the least I could do was help out. I couldn't take it honestly, so I snapped.

I've been under a lot of pressure for printing assignments and group work etc, and that was lowk the last straw.

I told him that Liam is HIS son, not mine, he is NOT my responsibility,

I didn't choose to have a kid when I wasn't ready and my only obligation is to get my degree and move out.

They both went silent for a bit, visibly upset and after a while Mark just said it's fine and that I shouldn't bother asking them favours in the future.

My mom later that day texted me and said i was disrespectful and hurtful, which I did lose my temper slightly,

but I feel like they had no right to try and force Liam as my responsibility so last minute. AITA for what I said?

In stepfamilies, lines blur fast, especially when an adult child lives with a parent’s partner and there’s a ready-made expectation to “help.”

Stepfamily researcher Dr. Lisa Doodson notes that role ambiguity is common and corrosive: “It’s therefore really important that you work out, with your partner, what your roles are in the family,” including “who does what and when” to avoid resentment and conflict.

OP’s refusal wasn’t about an 11-year-old; it was about autonomy during a high-stakes academic weekend and the sudden imposition of parental duties he never agreed to.

Clinical psychologist Dr. Ramani Durvasula frames healthy relating as protecting a separate identity and basic rights: “It is a basic human right to be seen and to have your own and separate identity, needs, wants, and aspirations expressed and recognized.” In practice, that means it’s legitimate to say no to obligations that overwrite your priorities or presume consent.

Why the explosion? Because last-minute “just take him with you” requests create what Doodson calls mismatched expectations, someone assumes a caregiving role exists, the other never signed up. Without explicit agreements, families fall back on guilt, which escalates resistance.

Doodson’s guidance is straightforward: make responsibilities explicit, agree them in advance, and revisit them as circumstances change. That’s the antidote to the very dynamic OP pushed back against.

So, was OP “harsh”? The language was blunt, but the boundary is sound: parents retain responsibility for their own children; extended help is negotiated, not presumed.

Durvasula’s lens adds one more safeguard: name what’s unacceptable (e.g., unilateral assignments, “it’s just one day” minimization), and interact differently next time: pre-set limits, offer specific, time-boxed help you can sustain, and decline emergency cover that collides with non-negotiables like exams.

That protects OP’s academic bandwidth and preserves the relationship by replacing snap refusals with clear, shared rules.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

These Redditors agreed the student was right to set boundaries

spambreath − NTA. Be one thing if they had asked in advance and you agreed. But springing it last minute?

Also followed up by the emotional manipulation of well don’t ask us any more favors?

Hard pass. Not your kid, not your responsibility. Don’t feel bad saying no and setting boundaries.

Your education has to be the priority and come first.

julesk − NTA I’d text your mom “I was headed out the door to campus when he announced I was babysitting.

I had specific things I needed to do but he said I could just take Liam, who is high energy and noisy to the campus library. So I said no.

It’s frustrating that Mark believes I am the on call sitter and whatever else I’m doing will accommodate that.

If I’m going to manage graduating, I need to be able to plan around anything I do for you both.

It doesn’t mean I won’t contribute; it does mean that I am not Liam’s parent, whose care I have to schedule around.

I do not think it’s disrespectful to tell Mark that since it’s a recurring issue and I was upset as I have school deadlines.

I can contribute in various ways, just not at the last minute unless it’s an emergency.”

Specific_Impact_367 − Nta. Mark is using you and being lazy. He had other options and this wasn't an emergency. You did well to nip this in the bud.

This group condemned the mom’s boyfriend for overstepping

FairyCompetent − NTA. This was not an emergency, they had plenty of time to sort out childcare.

parodytx − NTA, of course. You need to say nothing else than "No."

And do not forget, Mark and Liam are NOT YOUR FAMILY, even by marriage to your mom yet. HE IS MOM'S BOYFRIEND!

To just presume that another adult in the home is automatically able to just "take care of" your child is the height of arrogance.

Please remember that if they ever try to just "leave" Liam with you without your express consent, that is called child abandonment and is a crime.

If Mark or even your mom gets pushy about it all remind them of this fact - you only have to call the cops who can call CPS.

I'd plan on moving out as soon as you can, or perhaps move in with a more sympathetic relative until you can be independent. (edited: OP is male)

ColorfulConspiracy − NTA. At first I interpreted this as Mark being your stepdad, and then I realized that he’s your mom’s boyfriend.

So the fact that this is the expectation is even more not ok. Mark is massively overstepping and unfortunately your mom is letting him.

Have you tried talking to her about it when Mark isn’t around?

These commenters showed empathy, stressing that the OP’s education should come first and calling out the adults’ disregard for his schedule

Savings_Telephone_96 − NTA. It was inappropriate for Mark to spring it on you last minute and expect you to drop everything.

It’s also not your fault you snapped; you tried to speak reasonably and he didn’t want to listen.

You should also know that your living situation could become difficult. Be prepared by making plans.

HatingOnNames − My daughter is the same age and also in college. I do not have a bf with a child.

However, I’d be mad as heck if my bf expected my child to drag another child around with them the day before a big project is due.

My daughter’s only job (and she does not pay rent or bills) is to get through college successfully and start a career.

These parents should have planned better, given more noticed, and checked with the 20 year old

because then the 20 year old would have had time to complete all the tasks they needed to BEFORE the day they were needed.

It’s not the 20 year old who exhibited disrespect. It was the parents' thinking that they could just hijack someone’s day without prior notice,

trying to minimize the importance of what the college student had going on,

and doubling down on their request because it was “inconvenient” for them.

20 year old standing up for themself isn’t “disrespectful” and the only ones who would think it is are people

who feel entitled to someone else’s time and labor simply because they financially support them.

They should really think hard about that mentality.

TundraStorms − NTA It sounds like he was being incredibly dismissive of your needs at the time and that you don’t feel proud

about how you defended your boundaries in the end.

However, you would not have been pushed so far if any one of your “nos” had been respected. You’re an adult.

You should be able to state what you can handle and be heard.

As the de facto family babysitter from age 12 to 19, I know how easy it is to be taken for granted

and have my life goals sacrificed for today’s convenience.

What you said and how you said it might not have been great but they laid the foundation of shittiness that resulted in this moment.

These users highlighted the importance of asserting “no” without guilt

One-Plantain-9454 − NTA. They dropped this on you at the last minute. That’s disrespectful to you and your time.

You are not a built in babysitter. Just because your mom is offended doesn’t make her right.

They overstepped big time and waited til the last minute thinking they could just dump him on you. No way. NTA.

Regular_Boot_3540 − NTA. He needed to hear that. It was petty of him to say he wouldn't do you any favors going forward.

He didn't even ask you in advance, so he'd have time to make alternative arrangements.

He just ASSUMED you were available. That's not okay when dealing with an adult who has obligations, like studying for school.

FiberKitty − Disrespectful? !? What's disrespectful is Mark feeling entitled to OP's babysitting services with no notice or agreement

and then pushing back hard when the answer is "No."

Firmly setting boundaries when they have been repeatedly dismissed is not disrespectful; it is meeting the bully on his own turf.

And equating his "Babysit all day even though you were about to walk out the door"

with "any favors at all in the future" shows what a n__ty piece of work Mark is. Yuck. NTA

Both worried about long-term harm, warning that the mom’s favoritism and parentification could permanently damage her relationship with her child

Alarming_Tie_9873 − No is a full sentence. Focus on what is important.

Stepfather should have planned ahead if they wanted to go out. Tell them you will consider future requests if they are done ahead of time.

Lucky_Astronomer_435 − Sounds like your Mom doesn’t care about your needs at all. Just her convenience and pleasing her boyfriend.

That's not unforgivable but she should know she's risking the relationship with you her own child by parentifying you

and running over your boundaries. Over time if she keeps doing this she might find you don't visit and you may just drop out of her life.

That's sad for both parties. And all over not wanting to find an appropriate babysitter. SMH

Wildcar_d − Nta. This is wildly wrong- for both you and Liam. His father foisting the responsibility on you is beyond wrong.

Your mom is terrible for watching it happen. Setting and enforcing boundaries is not hurtful. Stand up for yourself and don’t back down

So, was he right to refuse? Or should family loyalty mean saying yes, even when it costs your peace and focus? Either way, it’s a reminder that boundaries aren’t rebellion, they’re survival.

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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