A dad just dropped a parenting bomb on Reddit that has the internet divided harder than a holiday dinner with estranged cousins. After years of trying to help his son recover from drug use, this father drew the line when his adult son got caught—again—with meth. Instead of hiring a lawyer or bailing him out like before, he simply said, “Too bad.”
Cue the comment chaos. What made this story hit so hard wasn’t just the tough love—it was the layers underneath: the school choices, the mom’s alleged influence, and a growing sense that some parenting missteps may have helped shape the very path that led to this. Want the juicy details? Dive into the original story below!

One father shared a story of refusing to hire a lawyer to reduce his son Cody’s second f**ony m*th charge










After reading the full post, I couldn’t help but feel tangled up in frustration and empathy. This wasn’t just about jail or parenting style. It was about expectations crashing into messy reality.
The father’s tone reads like someone who’s exhausted from carrying the weight of a child’s downfall. But there’s also a trace of resentment, especially when he describes the public school as “basically g**tto” and blames it for his son’s spiral. I feel the sting of missed chances. Was he angry at his son—or himself? And if both, can one ever untangle the two?
Parenting an addict is not just heartbreaking—it’s emotionally decimating. You’re caught between wanting to save them and realizing that “saving” may actually make things worse.
This dad tried. He paid for rehab. He hired a lawyer. He set up a path that could have cleared his son’s record. But when his son relapsed, the father hit his limit—and that’s where Reddit drew its battle lines. Let’s unpack this from a psychological lens.
According to Dr. Adi Jaffe, addiction specialist and author of The Abstinence Myth, “Addiction thrives in secrecy and shame. Healing requires connection, support, and sometimes, consequences.” In this case, the father believed jail might be the consequence his son finally needed.
Yet some commenters weren’t buying the narrative. They challenged the father’s early decisions: letting his son live with a mother reportedly using meth, withdrawing emotionally when his son rejected the private school path, and reducing years of complex behavior to school zoning and “bad influences.”
Studies show that parental engagement—regardless of schooling—has a stronger effect on teen outcomes than school quality alone. According to a study by the GPS Education, consistent parental involvement across both academic and personal aspects leads to significantly better youth behavior and emotional health. The father admits being estranged from his son during crucial years. That estrangement may have sown the seeds of detachment we now see in his “too bad” response.
On the flip side, other commenters empathized with the dad’s exhaustion. “Addiction just takes and takes,” one user wrote. That fatigue is valid. It’s the emotional equivalent of burnout—called compassion fatigue in psychology.
As Dr. Charles Figley from Tulane University explains, “When a person experiences an extended period of caregiving without a reciprocal emotional return, they risk becoming emotionally numb or even hostile.” That numbness doesn’t make the dad a villain. It makes him human.
Ultimately, addiction recovery is rarely a clean, Hollywood-style arc. It’s messy. It’s frustrating. And as the story shows, sometimes it takes hitting rock bottom—like 30 days in jail—to realize change must come from within.
These commenters claimed Cody needs consequences, advising the Redditor to stand firm







However, some claimed the Redditor neglected Cody’s teen years, advising reflection on his role











This user claimed the Redditor failed to keep Cody safe, advising he recognize his part in the problem


This dad’s decision stirred a hornet’s nest of judgment, compassion, and uncomfortable truths. Some say he gave up too soon. Others believe he finally put his foot down after years of enabling.
But what do you think—was this a wake-up call for his son, or the last step in a long pattern of emotional distance? And when, if ever, is it okay for a parent to say “too bad” and walk away? Sound off in the comments below—we’re dying to know your take.










