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Aunt’s “Humble” Birthday Gift Backfires After She Buys Niece A $60 Fake Bag Instead Of A $2,200 One

by Marry Anna
December 2, 2025
in Social Issues

It’s tough being the only child and the center of attention in a family, but one spoiled 15-year-old took it to a whole new level when she demanded an expensive designer bag for her birthday.

Her family’s frustration had been building for years, especially with her entitled attitude. When the request for a $2,200 bag was made, it was the final straw for her aunt, who had had enough of her behavior.

Instead of giving in to the pressure, the aunt decided to teach her niece a lesson, gifting her a much cheaper but convincing dupe of the bag.

The niece’s reaction, however, was not what anyone expected.

Aunt’s “Humble” Birthday Gift Backfires After She Buys Niece A $60 Fake Bag Instead Of A $2,200 One
Not the actual photo

'AITA for buying my niece a fake dupe of an expensive bag she wanted to humble her for once?'

My (38F) niece (15F) is very spoiled by my brother and SIL. She's an only child and also the first and only grandchild of my parents.

Ever since she was younger, my brother, SIL, and parents gave her every and anything she wanted, never said no to her, you get the gist.

Due to this, now at 15, she is a NIGHTMARE to deal with. Everyone just basically gives her whatever she wants because you know, "she's the baby".

My husband (42M) and I are child-free by choice. We both have good careers and do very well for ourselves.

I've always had an expensive taste when it came to clothing, jewelry, bags, etc. (Important for later).

A few weeks ago, my husband and I went over to my parents' house for a family lunch. My brother, SIL, and niece were there too.

The conversations were mainly centered around my niece because her birthday was approaching.

My parents asked her what she wanted for her birthday this year. She told them that she wanted this specific designer bag worth around $2,200 USD.

My parents were completely taken aback, and kind of started laughing, telling my niece that's a bit excessive and there's no way they're spending that kind of money on a...

My niece then turned to my husband and me and said, "well, you guys can get it for me then, you're rich, but yet you always get me cheap gifts".

My husband and I were both taken aback (the gifts we get her aren't "cheap" at all) at how ungrateful and rude she was acting.

And also the sheer audacity of a 15-year-old demanding I get her a thousand-dollar bag.

My SIL jumped into the conversation, saying how I have all these bags, and "flaunting" them around my niece is only going to make her want them.

So, pretty much saying, I made my bed, lie in it, and get her the bag.

I think they left the conversation thinking they guilt-tripped me into getting her the bag; well, they were wrong.

I hopped on one of those designer dupe wholesale websites, ordered the bag for like $60 USD.

The bag came in like 2 weeks later. I wrapped the gift and brought it to my niece's birthday party.

Fast forward, she saw mine and my husband's gift and got super excited. She opened her gift, and immediately her face dropped.

She turned red in the face (you could tell the bag was a dupe). She asked us, "what is this? Is this a joke?"

I said, "No, this is your gift. Maybe in the future you should be grateful for the gifts we get you.

It's not the price that matters, it's the thought". My niece started crying, calling us "cheap" and "embarrassing."

My SIL had some not-so-nice words, too. My brother, SIL, and parents are upset because I "let down" my niece, and think I should apologize.

I think she needed to be humbled, and that her parents should encourage her to apologize to my husband and me for demanding we buy her the bag in the...

At the heart of this story lies a typical, but serious, family dynamic problem, when material generosity crosses into indulgence without boundaries, children may grow up expecting more than they’ve earned, eroding their capacity for gratitude, respect, and healthy social relationships.

In such cases, gifts stop being gestures of love, and start functioning as automatic entitlements.

Psychologists and parenting experts describe entitlement as a pattern that emerges when children are seldom told “no,” are rarely held accountable, and receive more than their maturity or perspective warrants.

When kids internalize entitlement, that is, they believe they deserve special treatment or expensive items without effort, they often lose the ability to appreciate what they have.

Research on the socialization of gratitude supports this, children whose upbringing emphasizes unconditional rewards rather than earned privileges tend to struggle showing genuine appreciation or empathy.

On the flip side, using humiliation, shame, or deceptive tactics, like giving a cheap dupe when the child expects a high‑end designer bag, as a corrective tool is psychologically risky.

A major critique in child‑development literature argues that shame-based discipline rarely fosters growth or behavior improvement; instead, it damages trust, triggers resentment, and undermines emotional security.

While the OP’s intention was arguably to “teach a lesson,” this kind of embarassment, especially delivered publicly in front of family, can backfire.

When shaming becomes the go-to response to entitlement, children may shut down, retaliate, or internalize negative self‑worth messages.

Moreover, experts on healthy parenting advise that what fosters gratitude and humility isn’t punitive “lessons,” but consistent boundary-setting, open communication, and opportunities to earn privileges.

Teaching a teen respect, responsibility, and appreciation works better through ongoing modeling of gratitude, delayed gratification, and accountability, not through stingy “traps.”

Rather than gifting a dupe as a “humble gift,” the OP might have opened a conversation, explained why the expensive bag felt excessive, discussed realistic expectations, and encouraged her niece to reflect on gratitude and responsibility.

They could have helped her earn a gift over time, or offered something proportional and meaningful without aiming to shame her.

Setting clear boundaries, that gifts come from care and not obligation, and teaching gratitude through respect would likely have had more constructive long-term effects than a faux‑luxury “lesson.”

This story shows how easy it is for generosity to backfire when it’s unchecked by boundaries. Spoiling may give instant happiness, but it can undermine appreciation, empathy, and respect.

True values, gratitude, humility, healthy relationships, grow not from showy gifts or “lessons through humiliation,” but from consistent boundaries, honest communication, and respect earned, not demanded.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These commenters lean toward ESH (Everyone Sucks Here), criticizing both the niece for her entitled behavior and the original poster (OP) for their petty approach.

OutrageousLuck4231 − ESH. The proper way to "humble" this child was to tell her she was spoiled and entitled and that you would not be getting her a $2000 bag,...

You could have chosen that road, the road filled with truth and integrity.

Instead, you played games with her, and "Haha," you won. Now she just thinks you're assholes and hasn't learned a darn thing.

She's probably right, even if she is a spoiled brat. Your brother and SIL are terrible parents for raising her to be an entitled brat.

You don't have to defend yourself for buying yourself nice things; you've earned it.

You know how they say two wrongs do not make a right? Two assholes just equals two assholes.

Anxious_Hotel1165 − This will probably be an unpopular opinion, but I think ESH. Your niece and her family are much more TA than you are.

But the way you handled it seemed like you were at her maturity level rather than acting like an adult.

As an adult, you should be able to set boundaries, clearly tell her no, and get her something that you consider reasonable (or don't get her anything and tell her...

bookeroobanza1 − I swear these posts always feel fake based on the sheer audacity of everyone involved.

Your niece for demanding a $2000 purse, her parents for backing her that she not only deserves one but that you should be the one to purchase it because obviously...

Pretty sure most people are going to say NAH after you painted such a horrible picture of all of them because, from my observations, that's how it works here.

But, damn, your response comes off as both petty and pious, and I could just hear your "triumphant" voice as you taught her this critical life lesson.

You could have done it with a simple "I'm sorry. I don't think a 15-year-old girl needs a $2000 bag.

And I really don't like being pressured to get it for her while also being told what we gave her in the past wasn't appreciated.

If you keep pushing it, then it's time for us to go, and we'll just take a pass on the birthday celebration this year."

Then follow through because providing an audience for this behavior for 15 years contributed to who she is now.

ESH. Your niece is exactly what your family mindlessly created. Thank you.

I appreciate a story where I don't think I like anyone involved, so there's no need to pick sides.

[Reddit User] − ESH. Does that humble her? How? They spoiled her, so they are AHs for sure. But your gift did nothing.

Humbling her would be taking her to volunteer at a women's shelter or to feed the homeless.

Your gift did nothing to teach her anything, especially since it was a thoughtless gift. So, you can't even say the thought is what matters.

These users agreed that OP’s response didn’t help the situation.

Gvlse − You all sound just awful so I am going to blame the grandparents for creating this circle of s__t.

jrm1102 − ESH. Everybody in this story sounds toxic. Your niece is clearly a spoiled AH who is being enabled.

Your sister is also an AH for trying to shame and guilt you into buying this.

You're an AH for playing this prank on her. Does this girl need to learn a lesson? Yes. Was this funny? Also, yes.

Your niece will not be humbled by this, and it only caused animosity.

DinoSnuggler − ESH. That child has obviously been failed by her parents and grandparents, but you aren't doing her any favors either by playing a prank on her at her...

Telling her, "it's not the price, it's the thought," after deliberately giving her a prank gift is not the flex you think it is.

paul_rudds_drag_race − Just stop buying her anything altogether.

blurryface_mike72 − ESH, it's not your place to "teach her a lesson," you embarrassed her and had to get one over on a child to make yourself feel better.

This group supported the idea of teaching the niece a reality check.

yeahyeahyeah6661 − NTA. Why in the world would anyone give a teenager a 2k bag???

Few-Entrepreneur383 − NTA. You buying yourself luxury items does not mean your niece is entitled to your money & it doesn't mean you're flaunting it either.

If your niece wants to invest her own money into a designer bag, that is her choice, but she doesn't get to demand one as a gift.

Personally, I wait for designers to have major sales before purchasing from them; I love high-quality handbags, but I'm not willing to spend more than a mortgage payment on one...

The last one I bought was a $3k bag for $600 because it was a discontinued look (last year's color palette) & the store had 50% off for enrolling in...

Nitro114 − NTA. The kid is a spoiled brat; she needs to face reality

WondrousBabyTurtle − For all of those who are saying that it's not your place to teach her a lesson.

Well, somebody has to, and clearly her parents are not doing it. NTA.

These commenters raised questions about OP’s reasoning, wondering why they thought a knock-off bag would humble the niece.

perfectpomelo3 − INFO: how, specifically, did you think buying her a knock-off that would obviously just be thrown away was going to “humble her?”

Ok-Context1168 − I guess I don't understand why you didn't confront this when she said, "You're rich, you buy this bag for thousands since you always get me cheap gifts"...

I would've been like, "Excuse me?" No one is entitled to gifts, especially obnoxiously expensive ones at 15.

And SIL, I can buy expensive bags because I work hard for them.

Maybe you should be teaching your daughter the same. " So ESH b/c the dupe didn't teach her a lesson and just caused an argument.

Grandparents and parents are AHs because spoiling your children leads to this: spoiled, rude, entitled brats that expect everything to be handed to them w/o having to put in any...

In a world where privilege and entitlement often go unchecked, this OP decided to give their niece a taste of humility. Was it fair to teach her a lesson in gratitude, or did they cross a line by giving her a fake bag?

While the OP’s frustration is understandable, did the public humiliation outweigh the intended lesson? What would you have done in their shoes?

Would you have taken a different approach, or stood your ground and humbled her? Share your thoughts below, this one’s bound to spark debate!

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Hello, lovely readers! I’m Marry Anna, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. As a woman over 30, I bring my curiosity and a background in Creative Writing to every piece I create. My mission is to spark joy and thought through stories, whether I’m covering quirky food trends, diving into self-care routines, or unpacking the beauty of human connections. From articles on sustainable living to heartfelt takes on modern relationships, I love adding a warm, relatable voice to my work. Outside of writing, I’m probably hunting for vintage treasures, enjoying a glass of red wine, or hiking with my dog under the open sky.

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