AITA for snapping at my stepcousin after she accused me of having ‘nepo privilege’?

How does family praise turn into a battlefield over career success? At a casual potluck, one woman’s recent promotion sparks accusations of unfair advantage from a relative in the same field, escalating into name-calling and unresolved tension.

Professional achievements often invite scrutiny, especially when personal connections overlap with workplace dynamics. This clash exposes raw emotions around merit, privilege, and recognition in shared circles.

‘AITA for snapping at my stepcousin after she accused me of having ‘nepo privilege’?’

Background sets the professional overlap.

Me and my stepcousin (I'll name her Lia for this post) are in the same field. We work at a company which is co-owned by my boyfriend's dad.

To put it simply, Lia's jealous. She thinks I don't deserve to be there and get everything handed to me. I'm a hard worker and got a promotion recently, which...

Both pursue external opportunities.

Both of us had actually been applying to some other jobs as well, she got one of them so she's going to move out of state soon. I also got...

The family gathering ignites the conflict.

We had a family potluck over the weekend, and of course a lot of them had heard of my promotion and were congratulating me. Lia was there and she seemed...

but at one point my aunt (her stepmom) said something about how proud everyone is of me for being so successful in a traditionally man's field. I just said thanks...

but decided to stay and I'm happy I have options on what I want to do. Lia overheard this and came at me, saying "it's not about my options but...

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The response ends the exchange abruptly.

I had enough at that point and told her to stop acting like a jealous b__ch, and focus on herself instead of looking at what others have that she doesn't.....

I told my friend this (she knows Lia too) and she said I should apologize to Lia and what I said was way wrong. I don't really think so, but...

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I had enough at that point and told her to stop acting like a jealous b__ch, and focus on herself instead of looking at what others have that she doesn't.....

I told my friend this (she knows Lia too) and she said I should apologize to Lia and what I said was way wrong. I don't really think so, but...

The disagreement erupts when Lia publicly attributes the poster’s success to nepotism at a family event, highlighting ignored achievements of her own. The poster defends her effort but resorts to insults, widening the rift. Family attention favors one milestone, fueling perceptions of bias tied to the poster’s relationship with ownership.

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Lia grapples with overlooked progress and suspected favoritism, expressing frustration clumsily in a group setting. The poster asserts earned recognition yet dismisses valid critiques, prioritizing self-image over dialogue. Mutual resentment blocks acknowledgment of shared hardships in competitive fields.

Workplace psychologist Dr. Adam Grant observes in Give and Take that “Recognizing privileges alongside efforts reduces defensiveness, allowing merit to shine without denial” (Grant, 2013). This approach validates concerns while affirming personal contributions.

Initiate repair by apologizing for the insult via message, then suggest coffee to discuss feelings neutrally. Acknowledge her job win publicly next time. Reflect privately on advantages to inform future responses. Practice phrases like “I hear your point on connections; let’s celebrate both paths.”

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See what others had to share with OP:

Social media dissected this nepotism-fueled family feud, overwhelmingly faulting the original poster for name-calling while validating underlying jealousies. Users unpacked timelines and privileges with additional context from comments.

Most judged the poster as the primary asshole for escalation and denial.

[Reddit User] − YTA - you lack self awareness. You can call yourself a hard worker. It sounds nice, but you can’t deny the situation is advantageous to you …...

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[Reddit User] − YTA. I don’t know if ‘nepo privilege’ is the right word, but surely the fact that you work at a company co-owned by your boyfriend’s father does...

I’m not saying you aren’t a hard working employee, but you’re definitely very safe at this job for a reason. Anyways this isn’t why you are TA.

YTA because there was no reason for you to call her a b__ch. She had a point that everyone was paying a lot of attention to your promotion, when she...

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I find nothing wrong in how she feels about that. There was no reason for you to lash out at her unhappiness because of the biased treatment she was receiving...

Pale-Mammoth-9340 − YTA Edit: OP replied to comments and said the job offer Lia got is not the same offer she got. She and Lia both applied to that company,...

This isn't the big thing though - the other offer that OP got, but declined, is a sister company of her current workplace. No s__t she got an offer from...

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Let's break down what Lia said. *Lia overheard this and came at me, saying "it's not about my options but my nepo privilege" and how "she got a new job...

I mean, even from your description of this potluck it doesn't sound like everyone was busy congratulating you - which is great and all - but pushing her to the...

Maybe she could've worded it better than kissing up to your ass but it doesn't sound like she's wrong. I'm not sure what the job is and maybe it isn't...

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This also brings me to the first thing she said about your nepo privilege. Is the job offer you got, but declined, the same job she got and accepted? If...

I'm not saying you don't work hard, but it's wrong to deny your boyfriend's dad co-owning the company has absolutely nothing to do with your position, not even a little...

But what makes you TA in what your said is your "b__ch" comment. There's no reason for you to lash out at Lia and call her a b__ch. Yes she...

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happybanana134 − YTA. She was acting jealous. ..but I think she has a reason to feel jealous and bitter, frankly. She has a new job and is moving out of...

You absolutely do have an advantage in the company you currently work for and, whilst I'm sure you do work hard, for her that sucks too. I don't think she's...

Ingwall-Koldun − YTA for calling someone a b__ch. Simple "jealous" would have sufficed.

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AnonymousTruths1979 − I'm happy I have options on what I want to do. Although I don't think you intended it the way she is likely to have taken it. .....

But although you know both parties and see them together in public, you do not have intimate knowledge of the complex relationship between Lia and her stepmother.

HER stepmom, who by all rights should have been celebrating HER achievement, was congratulating you (nothing wrong with that, in itself) on your accomplishment,

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and your response was to share that... actually you're even more accomplished, because you got this other thing similar to what Lia got. And then pointed out that you had...

Again, I don't think you meant it as a dig at Lia. But I also don't think either of us know what other digs she'd put up with before that...

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Yes, Lia was obviously jealous. But what you read as a petty, jealous attack. .. I think most of us are reading as a hurt, jealous defense. You do have...

But she does not have them. And if even a tiny fraction of the decision was made because of your relationship to the boss, that is "nepo privilege". It's not...

It was an attack on other people's behavior. You said you'd "had enough". .. but you list this as the inciting incident and say "she seemed fine" before that. This...

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Meanwhile, she probably had "had enough" of being ignored and passed over at a family event where, though you'd both achieved something, everyone was . .. "kissing your ass".

The courteous thing to do, would have been to say, "Hey that job you got was amazing! I'm not sure why no one is celebrating BOTH things. " Or ....

Instead you attacked her. And not in some "was it or wasn't it? " sort of way. You resorted to name-calling, and told her to focus on herself, which is...

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Your friend is right. You should apologize to Lia. What you said was way wrong. She could have behaved better. But she wasn't trying to hurt you, she was trying...

delkarnu − So to recap from your comments. You started dating your boyfriend, only after which you got the job at his daddy's company. You and Lia both applied for...

You got a different offer at a sister company co-owned by your bf's dad, but also got a promotion at your bf's dad's company. In what world aren't you benefitting...

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kilawolf − Lmao the details are kinda hilarious. ..and would make anyone say YTA Stepcousin worked at the firm first, OP joined after they started dating their bf (Yet somehow...

Stepcousin and OP applied to the same place yet only stepcousin got the offer The other offer OP got was from a sister company

Natty-light1224 − YTA you don’t deserve to be there, when you applied for jobs that your bfs dad didn’t own you did not come up to par. She has every...

A minority saw shared fault but leaned critical.

Posada620 − ESH. She def is jealous and you had every right to go off on her like that cause of what/where she said s__t, but don't play dumb. You...

Far_Opening2859 − It is obvious that Lia is jealous, but it is impossible to comment if she has grounds to be so. Either way, what she did was in poor...

She started working here a couple of years before me I also applied for that position but didn't get it, which is fine.

The one I got is also very good, it's a sister company of where I'm currently working OP, unless you are incredibly brilliant or she is amazingly bad, overlooking a...

You cannot spin this to look good. Best to accept it. Note that you did not get the offer she got. Your offer was from a sister company which opens...

SamSpayedPI − ESH but mostly you. Yes, Lia shouldn't have "come at you" and she was jealous that everyone was congratulating you on your promotion, and ignoring her new job....

1. I too suspect that "nepotism" had some role in your getting hired at the company in the first place, and your promotion. Your boyfriend's father owns the company!

2. You called her a "b__ch" which was pretty rude. 3. You told her to "focus on herself instead of looking at what others have that she doesn't. " Since...

True-Mousse4957 − ESH. There is no need to throw it in her face. I don't think it's a big stretch to say your status as the girlfriend of the co-owners'...

Some sought clarification on celebrations.

BeccasBump − INFO: Everyone was congratulating you on your promotion. Were they also congratulating Lia on her new job?

wesweb − This is almost as good as the guy last week calling himself a hard worker after inheriting a factory from dad.

The exchange teaches that acknowledging advantages diffuses tension faster than denial or insults. It stresses balancing self-pride with empathy for others’ overlooked wins. Grace in victory preserves relationships.

When family ties influence careers, how openly should privileges be discussed? Would you apologize for harsh words even if feeling provoked?

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