Helping aging parents is something many adult children do without thinking twice.
Picking up groceries, checking in on the house, collecting mail during vacations, these are often small acts of care that help families stay connected.
But what happens when a favor slowly starts feeling less like a choice and more like an obligation?
One 42-year-old man from Scandinavia recently found himself wrestling with that question after years of helping his retired father and stepmother maintain their property while they spent much of the summer at their second home.
For a long time, he happily stopped by their villa to water plants, collect mail, and keep an eye on things. The problem wasn’t helping.
The problem was the lawn.
More specifically, an aging, frustrating lawn mower that turned a simple task into a sweaty, exhausting chore. And after being reminded four days in a row to mow the grass, only to discover his parents returned to the house the very next day, he began wondering whether he was being helpful or simply being taken for granted.

Here’s how it unfolded.
















A Favor That Kept Growing
The man explained that his father and stepmother are comfortably retired.
Between pensions, savings, and ownership of both a villa and a summer house, they are financially secure. They are not struggling to make ends meet, nor are they unable to pay for services if needed.
As one of four brothers, he happens to be the only sibling still living nearby.
That naturally turned him into the family’s unofficial caretaker whenever his parents spent extended periods at their summer home.
The arrangement seemed reasonable.
Once a week, he would stop by the villa to collect mail and water plants. Occasionally, he handled deliveries or forwarded important documents.
Those tasks took little time and felt like normal family support.
Then there was the lawn.
Unlike the other responsibilities, mowing required considerably more effort.
The aging gasoline-powered mower was notoriously unreliable. Its self-propelled feature barely worked, the engine stalled repeatedly, and thick patches of grass often brought the machine to a complete stop.
An hour-long mowing session typically involved multiple restarts, plenty of frustration, and enough physical effort to leave him drenched in sweat.
Still, he usually did it.
Not because he enjoyed it, but because saying no had never come naturally.
The Four-Day Reminder Campaign
The situation reached a breaking point during a recent visit.
For four consecutive days, his parents reminded him that the lawn needed mowing.
The repeated messages irritated him.
The request itself was one thing. The constant reminders were another.
Already busy with his own schedule, he eventually gave in and spent the time cutting the grass despite not wanting to.
Then came the part that truly bothered him.
The very next day, his parents stopped by the villa themselves.
After days of pressure and an hour of labor, he couldn’t help wondering why the task had been so urgent if they were returning almost immediately anyway.
That moment changed how he viewed the arrangement.
The issue was no longer about grass.
It was about feeling that his time was considered less valuable than theirs.
When Helping Starts to Feel Expected
One of the hardest transitions many adults face is learning the difference between generosity and obligation.
Helping family often feels good when it’s freely given. Resentment tends to emerge when assistance becomes expected rather than appreciated.
Psychologists frequently note that healthy boundaries play an important role in maintaining positive family relationships. According to Psychology Today, boundaries help individuals protect their time, energy, and emotional well-being while still maintaining meaningful connections with loved ones. Without clear boundaries, relationships can gradually become imbalanced, leading to frustration and burnout.
Experts emphasize that setting boundaries is not selfish. In many cases, it actually prevents resentment from building and allows relationships to remain healthier over the long term. Saying “I can help with this, but not that” creates clarity and realistic expectations.
That perspective sheds light on why this situation feels so emotionally charged.
The man wasn’t refusing to help entirely.
He was already handling multiple responsibilities for his parents.
What he wanted was a limit.
A line separating reasonable favors from ongoing physical labor that his parents could comfortably afford to outsource.
A Problem With Several Obvious Solutions
Part of the frustration stemmed from the fact that alternatives clearly existed.
His father could purchase a newer mower. He could hire a local landscaping service. He could invest in a robotic mower, something several commenters enthusiastically recommended.
The financial burden would be manageable.
What made the situation difficult was the feeling that the easiest solution seemed to be relying on his son instead.
And because the son had always agreed in the past, the expectation had quietly become routine.
Unfortunately, routines can be hard to break once they’re established.
Especially within families.

Most commenters sided with the son and argued that he had already been more than generous.




Many pointed out that collecting mail and watering plants sounded like reasonable favors, while regularly mowing a large lawn with a malfunctioning mower crossed into a very different category of responsibility.





Others focused on the larger issue of boundaries. Several commenters observed that the parents likely kept asking because they had learned that persistence eventually worked.




Family relationships are often built on helping each other.
But helping should remain a choice, not an obligation.
This man’s frustration wasn’t really about grass or lawn mowers. It was about feeling that his time, energy, and personal life were becoming secondary to a task his parents had the resources to solve themselves.
Learning to set boundaries can feel uncomfortable, especially with family.
Yet sometimes saying no isn’t an act of selfishness.
It’s an act of self-respect.
The real question is whether refusing to mow the lawn will damage the relationship, or whether finally setting a boundary might actually improve it in the long run.


















