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Dad’s Frustration Reaches Boiling Point After Daughter Refuses To Help With Family Tasks

by Annie Nguyen
December 3, 2025
in Social Issues

When grown kids come back home, even for a short stretch, parents often fall back into old patterns without realizing it. The same goes for the kids, who may still be treated like they never left, even though their lives look very different now.

It only takes one clash of expectations for everything to boil over.

That is exactly what happened to one dad who asked his daughter to help out with a couple of holiday errands. She insisted she had academic work to finish, he felt she was brushing him off, and the tension between them built until it erupted into something none of them saw coming.

Scroll down to see how a simple gift exchange turned into a major family standoff.

A father’s request for small holiday errands sparks a tense clash with his visiting grad-student daughter

Dad’s Frustration Reaches Boiling Point After Daughter Refuses To Help With Family Tasks
Not the actual photo

'AITA for asking my daughter for help?'

I'm 54 and daughter is 28.

She is home on break from grad school getting her phd.

She's only home for two weeks because she says she doesn't have any more time even though she has a month break.

That's been a big thing with her lately, she is constantly to busy to do things with us or help us out even though she does have the time.

I got my younger daughter a sweater and it turns out she already has it.

I called my older daughter from work on Friday and told her she needed to run and exchange it for a different one.

She said ok, she'd do it the next day. I said it needed to be done that day to get the best options and she said she was grading so...

I told her that it's not like she can't pause her grading, run out, and exchange it.

She said she wasn't going to slow down her work and just said that I should do it when I got back from work that day.

I said I was busy to and didn't feel like running out after a long day of work and she said neither did she.

But she doesn't have a "long day of work," she's sitting on her ass on her computer all day and

doesn't even have scheduled hours to work, she can do it whenever she wants.

Today things really kicked off because I needed her to pick up an online order for a gift for my mom, her grandma.

She again used the excuse of grading (she hadn't even started working yet, it was in the morning and she was drinking coffee and having breakfast.)

She said that she needs to have her grades done by today but I looked it up on the website and

she has until Monday evening so I called her on her BS,

and she said she had "other work" due on Monday so she needed to get the grading done today (but wouldn't enlighten me on what this mysterious "other work" is).

I said well tough, this needs to be picked up today so I can wrap it and I was going into the office so I couldn't do it.

She said that if I don't want to do it myself, then it will be done on her own time.

I told her with that attitude she can stay somewhere else and she said "happily"

and packed her things claiming she didn't want to stay here anyway but was only doing so because I insisted.

She left her gifts and said to not expect her for the holidays and she'll go to her girlfriend's family instead.

I think it's ridiculous that she is throwing a fit just because she can't constantly live like she's the only person on the planet

but my wife and other daughter is now furious with me.

So I figured I'd ask here because my younger daughter is always reading the stories with me.

AITA or am I correct that my daughter is self centered and childish?

 

edit: I want to clarify two things 1. I am her dad, not sure why everyone keeps referring to me as her mother

2. Everyone keeps telling me the grade due date is actually the post date.

If I was allowed to I would post the link so that you could see that the calendar literally says "December 19th:

Grades Due From Faculty" and "December 20th Grades Posted".

She literally admitted to lying that they were due Sunday (today) so I'm not sure why people are so stuck on insistng I'm wrong about that

Every family eventually reaches that uncomfortable moment when the past and present no longer line up. Parents still see the child they raised, while the adult child arrives carrying responsibilities, deadlines, and personal boundaries that didn’t exist years before. When those two realities collide, even the smallest favor can feel charged with disappointment and misunderstanding.

Beneath the surface of this father–daughter conflict is a shared longing that neither knows how to express: the desire to feel respected, valued, and understood.

For the father, the issue isn’t just errands. It is the creeping sense that his daughter has drifted away now that her life has become absorbed by graduate studies. Her refusal feels like rejection. For the daughter, the situation is different.

She is juggling academic pressures, time constraints, and the emotional weight of her own work. Having her boundaries overridden feels like a threat to her autonomy. These two emotional truths are real, but they crash into each other instead of meeting in the middle.

A fresh perspective shows how much of the conflict stems from invisible labor. To many older generations, work is defined by physical tiredness or fixed schedules. To younger adults, especially those in academia, the work is far more mental, uninterrupted, and easily underestimated.

This gap causes friction: one side sees “plenty of time,” while the other feels constantly overstretched. Neither is lying; they are simply experiencing different versions of effort.

Research supports this emotional misalignment. Psychology Today’s article “Mental Load: The Invisible Weight of Parenthood” explains that a huge portion of modern work planning, organizing, and thinking ahead is invisible to others but profoundly draining. The article emphasizes that when invisible labor is not acknowledged, resentment builds quickly on both sides.

Similarly, the academic paper “Beyond Time: Unveiling the Invisible Burden of Mental Load” highlights how cognitive and emotional workload often goes unnoticed, especially in environments that rely heavily on self-directed tasks. It notes that people frequently underestimate work that lacks visible effort, leading to conflict within families and teams.

The expert insights highlight exactly why this situation spiraled. The father is measuring effort by how drained he feels after a physically tiring job. His daughter, however, is dealing with intellectual pressure that never fully switches off, even when she looks relaxed.

Because neither form of labor is visible to the other, both end up believing their own workload is the heavier one. That misunderstanding turns simple, everyday tasks into emotional flashpoints.

A practical takeaway is that families need to recalibrate roles when an adult child returns home. It is possible to maintain closeness while also respecting the boundaries that come with adulthood.

When both sides take a moment to notice the other’s kind of effort whether physical or mental they create room for empathy. And with that understanding, future conflicts are less likely to erupt into the kind of holiday turmoil this family just experienced.

Check out how the community responded:

This group says OP is the real selfish one and is projecting onto his daughter

Caspian4136 − YTA How can you not see what a major AH you're being?

She's a 28 year old grown woman and you're trying to boss her around like she's 14.

She is very busy with her phd, yet you seem to think she's sitting on her ass doing nothing all day. Guess what?

She doesn't have to do a thing you tell her to do, just because you say it. Get over yourself, you're not the center of the universe.

I hope you're happy that you drove her out of the house and won't see her over the holidays,

all over not being able to accept that she's now an adult with her own life.

cranbeery − YTA, bucko. You raised a woman who takes her work seriously and now you can't handle it.

Your shopping issues don't take precedence just because you want them to.

SmarthaSmewart − "She said that she needs to have her grades done by today

but I looked it up on the website and she has until Monday evening

so I called her on her BS, and she said she had "other work" due on Monday so she needed to get the grading done today

(but wouldn't enlighten me on what this mysterious "other work" is).

" She won't enlighten you because it's none of your business.

Your daughter is busy and doesn't have time to run errands for you.

Read your post again and see if you can figure out who is self-centered and childish. YTA.

AGoodSO − asking my daughter for help OK I called my older daughter from work on Friday and told her she needed to run and exchange

it for a different one YTA already for just blatantly lying to reddit when you've clearly just ordered her. She said ok, she'd do it the next day.

That's nice of her I said it needed to be done that day I see you've joined r/ChoosingBeggars I said I was busy to and didn't feel like running out

What? She's also busy. You don't know everything that grad school is making her do.

So if you're not just having a pissing contest with a grad student's workload, you're just self-importantly asserting that your time is more valuable than hers.

I said well tough, this needs to be picked up today Tough what?

You're the person that merely wants someone else to do your bidding for your nonessential tasks.

she can't constantly live like she's the only person on the planet This is projection.

These commenters argue OP belittles academic work and ignores his daughter’s boundaries

lazyhere1122 − YTA. This must be a joko too many ridiculous assertions.

The first, suggesting that sitting at a computer isn’t work/hard work.

Mainly, that you can be surprised she doesn’t want to visit when you just use her as an errand girl when she does.

Also, none of your requests were urgent so why on earth can’t she get them done in her own time?

If you’re asking a favour,don’t be so demanding.

Shoddy-Indication-76 − YTA You daughter is an adult woman who is nice enough to come visit you, which she doesn’t have to.

It is not an obligation to spend time with you.

She has tone of work to do and instead of respecting her work and respecting her boundaries, you demean her, her work and her efforts.

If you need all those chores be done, why wouldn’t you do it yourself?

54 is more than capable to do simple tasks. Would you ask guests who you invite to your house to do those tasks?

I doubt it. But you think it’s ok to ask your adult daughter who is working on vacation because of highly demanding career she has.

“She is sitting on her ass all day in from of computer” that’s what becoming a doctor takes.

She is doing work on her vacation. PhD is a very hard work, and you just demeaning all her work. You sound like a horrible dad.

I wouldn’t be surprised that in few months you post here “my daughter went no contact, but all I have been is a loving father”.

I am really surprised how some parents think they can treat a 28 y/o about to be a doctor like a high school kid who is playing video games all...

Emotional_Fan_7011 − YTA. She is grading, and those have to be submitted within (usually) 48 hours after the final exam takes place.

She may be "sitting on her ass in front of a computer" but getting your PhD is no joke.

If it were easy, everyone would have one. It's hard work.

Also, She is an adult and is more than capable of deciding what to do with her day.

She is not your personal assistant simply because she is home from school for the break.

madding1602 − YTA. You're disrespecting your daughter's work, people who work from home and your daughter's time with this post.

First, grading is not a quick job, even slower with papers that are long writing essays.

Second, just because she works from home doesn't mean she's your personal slave.

And finally, your lack of planning isn't her emergency. Grow up OP

This group says OP uses his daughter as an errand runner instead of respecting her autonomy

lonnielee3 − YTA. OP, you’re only 54 and are expecting your daughter to run errands for you like she’s a paid shopping assistant.

You played the “I’m your mom and you must obey me” card and you lost.

I’m pushing 80 and I never ask my young relatives to do something for me that I’m capable of doing myself or hiring done.

My mother had your philosophy children are supposed to DO for their mother and she died alone in a nursing home

because nobody could stand to be around her. Read and learn.

cheezitapplepie − You sound horrible. She is not your employee, she is a grown woman who owes you nothing.

You CHECKED HER WORK CALENDAR? How DARE you? For that gross overstep alone, you would not see me for at least 6 months.

Unbelievable lack of respect for her boundaries. YTA

jrm1102 − YTA - youre an adult, run your own errands. Why are you demanding your daughter do them?

Do you realize how huge of an AH you sound like?

These Redditors say OP asked for favors but acted controlling and demanding

WaywardPrincess1025 − This is an easy one, YTA. It’s okay to ask your daughter for help.

It’s not okay to hound her, complain when she says no, and then kick her out. I would say, that you learned a lesson but it’s clear you didn’t.

PinkNGreenFluoride − YTA. BuT iT's NoT eVeN ReAl WoRk!

elizabethcb − Yta. Grading is working. She’s supposed to interrupt her day for your mistake?

This group claims OP twists details, exaggerates, or acts entitled to obedience

[Reddit User] − YTA am I correct that my daughter is self centered and childish? Nope that's a mirror you are looking at.

Family obligations are never as simple as they seem, especially when adult children have careers, schooling, or research commitments.

This father’s holiday expectations collided with his daughter’s need for autonomy, leaving both sides frustrated and upset. Do you think he was justified in asking for help, or should adult children have complete freedom over their time?

How would you handle similar holiday pressures with grown kids? Share your opinions below and weigh in on who should truly call the shots during family chaos.

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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