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Son Moves Out and Plays the Victim After Stealing $3k from Parents

by Marry Anna
November 23, 2025
in Social Issues

Every parent dreads the “failure to launch” scenario, but what happens when the rocket not only fails to launch but also burns a hole in your wallet on the way down?

A 20-year-old decided that his parents’ “emergency credit card” was actually a “luxury lifestyle card,” racking up thousands of dollars in debt. When confronted with an ultimatum to pay it back or find new living arrangements, he chose a dramatic exit and a new narrative: he was the victim who got “kicked out.”

Now, read the full story:

Son Moves Out and Plays the Victim After Stealing $3k from Parents
Not the actual photo

AITA: Son moved out but is telling everyone we kicked him out?

Son (20M) isn’t in college. We told him the fall after high school that we would “charge him rent” of $500/mo.

That money would be put into a savings account for him, and then when he was ready to move out he would have a nice nest egg to start adulting...

Last summer I left him my credit card “for emergencies” while we went away on vacation. He spent $3k on clothes, food, etc

while we were gone. Obviously none of the purchases were an emergency. And no, he didn’t have permission.

We told him he needed to pay us back. He didn’t. He also barely ever paid the $500/mo “rent”.

This April we told him he had three months to pay us back half of the money he [misused] (so $1500) or he had to move out.

May comes, he pays nothing. June comes, he pays nothing. I said “are you looking for a new apartment?

Because your deadline to pay us back is 1 month away”. He started screaming that he was moving out.

The next morning he and his gf (she was basically living here too) left without a word and haven’t been back since (this was July).

He stopped by one time to pick up some clothes and his PlayStation and he didn’t speak to us while here.

We are still paying his cell phone bill. We stopped paying his car insurance after he moved out. He barely responds to text messages from me or his dad.

I found out he is telling everyone that we kicked him out? I honestly didn’t think we were being very strict.

But the fact that he basically won’t talk to us now, clearly means he thinks we were [jerks]? Were we?!.

There is a lot of pain between the lines of this post.

You can feel the OP’s mix of frustration and heartbreak. It is the classic parental dilemma: holding your child accountable feels terrible, but letting them slide feels worse. The son’s reaction is textbook ” DARVO” (Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender).

By claiming he was “kicked out,” he avoids addressing the elephant in the room: the financial theft.

The $3,000 spending spree on “clothes and food” while the parents were away isn’t just irresponsible; it is a breach of trust that is far harder to repair than the financial loss. It signifies a profound lack of respect for the parents’ resources.

The OP wonders if they “enabled” him, and honestly, the answer is yes, but out of love. Leaving the card “just in case” was an act of care. Paying his phone bill even after he stopped talking to them? That is a lifeline they are afraid to cut.

But the hard truth is that consequences only work if they actually happen. He is currently controlling the narrative because he faced no real penalty until the very end.

Expert Opinion

This situation highlights a critical issue in modern parenting: the transition from “authority figure” to “consultant.”

According to Dr. Jeffrey Arnett, a developmental psychologist who coined the term “Emerging Adulthood,” the ages of 18-25 are characterized by identity exploration and instability. However, instability shouldn’t equate to a lack of accountability. When a child violates a clear boundary (like using an emergency card for leisure), the parent must enforce a “logical consequence.”

The OP attempted to do this by setting a repayment deadline.

Financial therapist Amanda Clayman suggests that money issues in families are rarely just about the math; they are about communication and expectations.

The “forced savings” rent plan, while well-intentioned, often backfires if the “tenant” (the child) doesn’t respect the landlord (the parent) enough to participate. Because the son “barely ever paid” the rent and suffered no consequences until now, he learned that parental deadlines were soft suggestions, not hard rules.

The theft of $3,000 is a significant breach. Legal experts would note that unauthorized use of a credit card is fraud, regardless of family status. While the parents (rightfully) didn’t file charges, the psychological weight of that action is heavy.

Advice for the parents? Stop paying the phone bill. Dr. Henry Cloud, author of Boundaries, emphasizes that protecting someone from the consequences of their behavior only guarantees that the behavior will continue.

By paying the phone bill, the OP is essentially saying, “We will support you even when you steal from us and slander us.” It is time to let the silence, and the bill, be his to handle.

Check out how the community responded:

The overwhelming majority of users focused on one lingering financial tie: the phone bill. They argued that paying for the ability of your child to ignore you is nonsense.

Imaginary-Yak-6487 - Stop paying the phone too.

Traditional-Eye-7230 - NTA. With a kid like this, it had to happen sooner or later. Better sooner. Stop paying his cell phone bill next.

Traepeezy - Why on earth are you still paying the phone bill?! ...I’d be on Facebook Marketplace with everythiiiiiiing.

Sausage_McGriddle - stop paying for his cell phone, he needs to hit rock bottom, like an addict, before he will change.

Several commenters validated the OP’s actions, noting that setting a condition (“pay me back or leave”) essentially is an eviction notice if the condition isn’t met, and there is no shame in that.

hopingtothrive - You did kick him out. Good for you. You stood up to him and kicked him out when he didn't pay... NTA.

Impossible_Street614 - Sometimes, you have to be cruel to be kind. He seems to have an unhealthy dose of self entitlement that will not do anyone any good...

OGRealityCheck - NTA, you didn't kick him out, he left on his own... what's to stop him from pawning some of your stuff the next time?

Also... report that credit card as misplaced... so that you're issued a new credit card number.

Other parents chimed in with eerily similar stories, offering a glimpse into a potential future if boundaries aren’t held.

PrizeBlackberry3003 - NTA. We’re going through the same issue... He told my husband he wasn’t ever going to do any of those things...

and moved out within two weeks... We found out about a month after that he was telling anyone who would listen we kicked him out.

A few users pointed out that the parents played a role in creating this monster by not enforcing rules sooner.

mass_psychosisTime - I feel like his entitlement didn’t come out of nowhere... you apparently never enforced his rent...

and have been chill about him paying you back? Of course he didn’t take you seriously!

One user offered a more nuanced take, suggesting that while the son is wrong, the relationship is fragile and requires care if the OP wants to salvage it.

Odd_Cress_2898 - He's being emotionally truthful... The real story is he abused your credit card and was given a choice...

He chose to pay for accommodation elsewhere instead of bending to your will... Try not escalating or you could be permanently low/no contact.

How to Navigate a “Failure to Launch” Crisis

If you are a parent dealing with an adult child who abuses financial boundaries:

Stop “Hybrid” Parenting: You cannot treat them like an adult when it suits them (privacy) and a child when it suits them (paying bills). If they are independent enough to leave, they are independent enough to pay their own bills (including phone and insurance).

Define “Help” vs. “Enabling”: “Help” is doing something for someone they cannot do for themselves. “Enabling” is doing something they can do but refuse to. Your son can work; paying his phone bill is enabling.

Secure Your Assets: As one commenter noted, get a new credit card number immediately. If he has the number memorized or saved in an online wallet, the theft could continue.

Accept the Villain Role: You cannot control the narrative. He will tell people you were mean. Accept it. The people who matter (close family/friends) likely already know the truth. Focus on your peace, not his PR campaign.

Conclusion

It is heartbreaking when a child leaves the nest in anger rather than with gratitude. But as the saying goes, “You can’t pay someone to respect you.” By holding the line, the OP has given their son the most valuable gift possible: the reality of adult consequences.

So, the consensus is that the parents are NTA (Not The [Jerks]). But should they cut the phone line, or is that one bridge too far to burn?

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Marry Anna, a lively writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT, is known for his energetic style in entertainment journalism. With a focus on accuracy, Marry Anna explores celebrities' lives, providing unique insights and interviews.

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