AITA for telling my daughter to grow up and find a job because I don’t believe she has depression?

In a cozy suburban home, where weekly dinners simmer with love, a parent’s patience bubbled over like an unwatched pot. Their 23-year-old daughter, a free spirit chasing art and music, filled her nights with friends and her days with Netflix marathons. But with no job or chores, her carefree vibe clashed with her parent’s push for independence. When she cited depression as her barrier, the parent’s doubt sparked a fiery showdown, leaving the house frosty.

This Reddit saga, raw and relatable, dives into the murky waters of mental health and family expectations. Is the daughter using depression as a crutch, or is the parent missing hidden signs? The story, buzzing with thousands of comments, pulls us into a debate about tough love, invisible illnesses, and growing up. Let’s unpack this tangle of emotions and see what Reddit and the experts think.

‘AITA for telling my daughter to grow up and find a job because I don’t believe she has depression?’

This happened before quarantine and things at home have been very tense every since, so I've been wondering if perhaps I'm the one in the wrong. I also realise that the title sounds bad right off the bat, but hear me out. I do believe in depression and I know that each person experiences it differently, but it makes no sense given these circumstances.

My daughter is 23 and lives at home. She didn't go to college (her own choice, we could have afforded to pay for it but she didn't want to go to pursue her art and music, which we supported). She has never had a job and doesn't help out much around the house, apart from cooking dinner once a week.

She went out with different friends at least 5 nights a week before this current situation and apart from that sat at home and binge watched TV show after TV show. From what I could tell she didn't drink heavily when she went out, and she always came home before 12am even though we don't have a curfew set anymore, her being the age she is.

This is all fine, because she's never been a trouble maker we've let her just do her own thing for a while now. However a few months ago I decided to have a talk with her about how she'd probably be less bored and feel more productive if she got a job. I told her it could be part-time at first but it would be good for her to start taking steps towards becoming more independent and acting more like an adult.

At this point she got incredibly defensive and shut down the idea almost immediately. She claimed that she can't get a job because she's severely depressed. This was a complete shock to me and so I asked if she wanted to talk about it to me or a professional and told her she didn't have to suffer in silence. She told me she didn't want to see anyone or talk about it to me and asked for me to just drop it, which I did.

From then on I started paying more attention to her behaviour to see if I'd missed anything obvious, but she's still going out with her friends as usual and doesn't show any of the symptoms of depression. Perhaps I'm being dense but when I went through depression after giving birth to my first child I basically completely shut down.

I wasn't eating, could barely sleep and half of the time couldn't summon the motivation to shower. But I still wasn't going to bring it up until she asked me to buy her a new phone because she'd dropped and cracked hers. I told her that if she had a job she could buy one herself, which was probably a bit too passive aggressive

but she immediately started shouting at me about how I don't understand anything and that I'm making jabs at her disability. At this point I told her she needs to grow up and that I've been nothing but patient and understanding with her when she refuses to even see a psychologist.. At this point she stormed into her room and has been cold and avoidant towards me ever since.. AITA?

Parenting a young adult can feel like juggling flaming torches—especially when mental health enters the chat. The parent’s push for their daughter to get a job was well-intentioned, aiming for independence, but questioning her depression claim mid-argument was like tossing fuel on a spark. Her social life and lack of visible symptoms don’t negate her struggles; depression often wears a convincing mask.

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This clash reflects a broader issue: misunderstanding invisible illnesses. A 2021 study by the National Alliance on Mental Illness found that 60% of young adults with mental health issues go undiagnosed, often due to stigma or subtle symptoms (NAMI). The daughter’s refusal to seek help complicates things, but her defensiveness may signal shame or fear, not deceit.

Dr. Lisa Damour, a psychologist specializing in adolescent mental health, says, “Depression doesn’t always look like sadness. It can show as irritability or avoidance, especially in young adults” (Psychology Today). Her insight suggests the daughter’s behavior—social yet stagnant—could align with depression, even if it puzzled her parent. The parent’s comparison to their own postpartum experience, while natural, overlooks how mental health varies.

For solutions, experts urge empathy paired with boundaries. The parent could encourage therapy by offering to cover initial sessions, framing it as support, not skepticism. Setting clear expectations—like contributing to household costs or chores—can foster responsibility without dismissing her feelings. Both sides need open dialogue, perhaps with a family therapist’s guidance, to rebuild trust and navigate this tricky phase.

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Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Reddit swooped in like a nosy neighbor with a megaphone, dishing out support, shade, and everything in between. From cheers for the parent’s tough love to jabs at the daughter’s “free ride,” the comments were a wild ride. Here’s the unfiltered scoop:

[Reddit User] − NTA. As someone who has it, and knows that it hits differently for everyone, I can understand how other people can get frustrated. Especially if the person doesn’t want to help themself. Like what are you supposed to do, support her for the rest of your life? It’s not fair to you.

MaggieMae68 − NTA .. but. Everyone experiences depression differently and I think in a way you're a little bit the a**hole for saying she doesn't have some form of depression.

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OTOH, your daughter is 23 years old and is doing nothing to further her life. It sounds like her idea is to just go on living with you for the rest of her life and never do anything.

No school, no job, no friends, no therapy ... absolutely nothing at all. It is her responsibility as an adult to care for her own health .. including her mental health. If she has depression and it's stopping her from being a productive adult human being, then she needs to see a therapist, talk to a doctor about medication, and generally take control of her life.

So no, you're not the a**hole for expecting her to be an adult at 23. You've bent over backwards to give her every benefit of the doubt, it sounds like, and at this point she's taking advantage and using 'depression' as an excuse.

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[Reddit User] − NTA. She’s 23 and never worked a day in her life? Oof. She may very well have depression, but she needs to be an adult and take care of herself. She can’t live with you forever and expect you to fund her evenings with her friends. Honestly, I don’t think your passive aggressive comment was so terrible because you’re right.

She approached you with the expectation that you would pay for a new phone, so letting her know if she wants a new phone she would have to pay for it is not unreasonable. This may not be the best approach but this is the only thing I can come up with - she’s living under your roof so even though she’s 23, YOU make the rules.

I would give two options: either seek help/therapy to work through her depression or get a job. Or BOTH. Who knows, maybe getting a job and having a purpose to her day will help with her depression. All I know is that if I were in your shoes, I wouldn’t just accept that this is the way things are going to be.

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CarpeCyprinidae − NTA. If it's undiagnosed, never spoken of and asymptomatic it's legit to say it isn't real. She should either get diagnosed or get a grip

MotorJeff − NTA - But, you definitely should have been instilling more responsibilities in her earlier. At 23, you should have a grip on doing these these things, like 'work', without someone telling you to. As for the depression, just as it's triggering the other people here who are calling you the a**hole, it's a perfect buzz word people can use to get sympathy.

People will blindly defend it in their need for social justice. Kids/young adults know exactly what to say to abuse systems with buzz words that they know people will blindly defend for them, before they vet the person and actually find out if they have it or not.. Bottom line, time for tough love.

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daughterofervin − YTA for enabling this behavior. Your daughter is able bodied and has never had a job and left school at least 5 years ago. You and your spouse allowed this and now you get to deal with the consequences. Good luck.

MrHonest2020 − NTA. At first I thought this would be you blatantly ignoring her depression but this is ridiculous. I'd probably understand her more if she denied her depression but acted like she was but it's the other way around. What's the use of self-diagnosing and just accepting? Does she expect to ride the graby train forever and use depression as an excuse?

To top it off she dropped and cracked her bloody phone yet she's throwing tantrums because you won't pay for it. She's 23. Mental illnesses only give a certain amount of leeway.. (You shouldn't really compare your experience to someone else's though)

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YMMV-But − YTA. Who is paying her way to go out with friends? Does she drive? Who pays for her car & gas? Who bought her the phone in the first place? Who pays her phone bill? If you’re the one funding her recreation, then you have a huge role in creating & continuing this situation. Even your approach to her getting a job is wimpy.

“It would be good for you”? That’s not why most people have jobs. They have jobs to pay their bills, & your kid needs to start paying her bills or going without. Unless you want this to go forever, start being a parent. Make any money from you conditional on her doing things. First thing: Your daughter needs to see a medical doctor, even via telemedicine.

Depression & anxiety are very often brain chemistry issues, which can be improved by prescribed drugs. If your kid broke her leg, while it might heal on its own in time, it would heal better & faster with a doctor’s help. Same with mental illnesses. If she doesn’t go to the doctor, no money, no car, no WiFi, no cable/satellite tv. Change the Netflix/Hulu/etc passwords so she doesn’t watch at a friend’s house.

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You would probably both benefit from seeing a therapist. Your therapist can guide you through helping your daughter get moving. Second thing: your daughter has to find something constructive to do outside the house, be it school, a volunteer assignment, or a job. This is to prepare her for getting a full time job & moving out of your house.

This is difficult right now, but the world will open up again. If she doesn’t find something to do, no money, no car, no tv, and phone/WiFi only to job hunt. You’re TA because you’re enabling her & doing nothing to help her. Helping her will be a process. It’s not as simple as just telling her you don’t believe she has a problem.

sread2018 − NTA- I could have written this post myself. My son (21) is in the exact same situation. Yes, the passive- aggressive reply was wrong but parenting is damn hard and you've recognised that already.

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The only other thing I've tried which works a bit was to help with finding him a job, review his CV, send links for jobs he might be interested in, ask family/friends for leads on jobs ect I have no idea about how to convince him to speak to someone about his depression. Good luck!

dougie_fresh121 − NTA, but you could have handled the situation better. I was tempted to say everyone sucks, but as a parent it is your job to make sure your child becomes a contributing member of society. You try to make your child become independent so they can live and prosper after you die. Telling her to find a job is just one part of it.

That being said, depression does hit everyone differently. The fact that your daughter won’t get help would be the most concerning thing to me. If she isn’t cut out for traditional work, maybe talk to her about getting into freelance art or graphic design, if she is still pursuing that. She doesn’t need a traditional job to start earning a living.

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If she is not wanting to do art and just doesn’t want to work at all, that is when I would be most concerned. Sometimes people need to be taught a hard lesson, and if she isn’t doing anything to better herself I would recommend charging “rent” or having her do chores to show her a sense of responsibility.

If you charge her “rent”, I would put it in a savings account in her name so when she does move out she has money saved up for her. Do NOT use the funds to pay for your financial obligations. I would be straightforward about this at the beginning of the arrangement so she can see you are working in her interests and not yours.

If she refuses to do this and refuses to seek treatment, you may have to kick her out to teach a life lesson. Give her two months in the house, go apartment shopping with her, find somewhere cheap and pay her first 2 months rent. That way she would have enough cushion to secure work,

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earn some money and see the urgency it takes to really survive outside your parents home. Best of luck with your situation. I am not a parent but this is how I would handle this myself if in your shoes. Its hard to come down on someone you love, but sometimes its because you love them you have to be hard on them.

These Redditors didn’t mince words, backing the parent’s push for accountability while wrestling with the depression debate. But do their hot takes nail the nuance, or are they just stirring the family pot?

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This family feud cuts deep, exposing the messy dance of love, doubt, and mental health. The parent’s push for independence clashed with a daughter’s unseen struggles, leaving both at odds. With empathy and boundaries, they might find a path forward, but it’s no easy fix. Have you faced a similar tug-of-war with family or mental health? What would you do in this parent’s shoes? Drop your thoughts below and let’s keep the convo going!

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