In some cultures, the deal is simple. Parents support their children early in life, and children support their parents later.
But what happens when only one side of that deal is honored?
That’s the question he’s facing now, after building his life without their help and being asked to give back in a way they never gave to him.
Here’s The Original Post:


























This situation isn’t just about money. It’s about expectations, and more importantly, consistency.
He grew up in a society where family roles are clearly defined. Parents invest heavily in their children’s education, often sacrificing for years to make it happen.
In return, children are expected to support their parents in old age, sometimes financially, often physically, and almost always emotionally. It’s not just tradition, it’s a social structure that most people follow without question.
But his parents didn’t follow that structure.
When it came time for college, they made a deliberate choice not to fund his education, even though they had the means. Their reasoning wasn’t financial hardship. It was philosophical.
They believed in independence, in self-reliance, in what they saw as a more “Western” approach to parenting.
On paper, that might sound reasonable. In reality, it placed him at a significant disadvantage.
Because the system around him didn’t match that philosophy.
Higher education in his country isn’t designed to be self-funded by young students. It requires full-time commitment, leaving little room for part-time work.
Financial aid is limited. Loans are difficult to access at that age. So while his parents framed their decision as building independence, the outcome was structural limitation.
He had to choose a lower-ranked college, not because of ability, but because of affordability. And in a job market where prestige matters, that decision didn’t just affect four years of education. It shaped the next decade of his life.
He compensated through effort. Years of grinding, sacrificing, pushing harder than peers who started with more support. Eventually, he reached stability.
But the cost of that path didn’t disappear.
Now the dynamic has flipped.
His parents are aging. Retirement is approaching. And they’re starting to express expectations that align much more closely with traditional norms. Living together. Providing care. Being present in ways that go beyond occasional visits.
That’s where the tension becomes impossible to ignore.
Because the relationship they built with him wasn’t traditional.
They chose independence when it benefited them. Now they’re asking for interdependence when it benefits them again.
That inconsistency is what feels unfair.
From a sociological perspective, this kind of conflict often happens when families mix value systems without fully committing to either. Research on collectivist versus individualist cultures shows that expectations need to be aligned across time.
When parents adopt independence-focused values early on, it often leads to looser obligations later. When they maintain collectivist values consistently, the mutual support system tends to remain intact.
Trying to switch between the two depending on the situation creates friction.
That’s exactly what’s happening here.
He’s responding to the relationship as it was defined, not as it’s now being requested.
Still, this isn’t an easy situation emotionally.
Because regardless of fairness, they are still his parents. And in many cultures, stepping away from that expectation comes with social pressure, judgment, and sometimes guilt.
His mother comparing him to others only reinforces that, holding him against a standard that doesn’t match his own experience.
There’s also a difference between refusing entirely and setting boundaries.
Right now, his stance is firm. He won’t take care of them. He’s even suggested alternatives like old-age homes, which, in his context, carry a strong negative connotation.
That makes his position feel harsher, even if it comes from a place of logic.
The real question is whether this is about principle, or about unresolved resentment.
Because those two things can look very similar from the outside, but lead to very different outcomes.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
Most people sided with him, focusing on the inconsistency in his parents’ expectations.



His parents made a choice years ago that shaped his life.
Now he’s making one that will shape theirs.
So the real question isn’t whether he owes them the same support others give their parents.
It’s whether he wants to build something different, or simply reflect back what he was given.


















