AITA for refusing to cook for my dad and brother?
A young woman working full-time has become the sole cook, cleaner, and yard worker for her father and brother, both of whom are competent adults who refuse to help. What starts as self-cooking to save money quickly turns into unpaid labor, leaving her exhausted and frustrated.
The situation worsens when she stops cooking for them, only to be met with insults and demands “because she cooks anyway.” Complicating the story is the implicit expectation that she, as the only daughter, should take care of everything herself, despite paying for groceries and managing chores, while her brother relaxes with video games and her recovering father watches TV on the couch.

‘AITA for refusing to cook for my dad and brother?’
The poster regained control of her spending by deleting Uber Eats and returning to home cooking.


Family demands turned her simple meals into mandatory service for three, without any reciprocity.



Household chores piled on relentlessly, pushing her to the brink of burnout amid a full-time job.





An edit revealed deeper issues of abuse, financial control, and secret plans to escape.



This family dynamic presents a classic case of parental entitlement and gendered labor exploitation, with one adult child taking on responsibilities that the other two blatantly avoid. The poster’s father, post-surgery but still mobile, takes on all the housework and outdoor chores for his daughter while her brother indulges in his leisure pursuits without consequence. What complicates the story is financial leverage – the lower cost of living traps her in a vicious cycle of overwork, exacerbated by her own limitations.
Opposing views might argue that family support during her recovery is justified, but the brother’s continued unemployment and refusal to contribute undermines that argument; even the temporary help from the father disappears. From a broader societal perspective, this clearly reflects the misogyny within family structures, where women are the default caregivers regardless of employment status, perpetuating burnout and resentment across generations.
Relationship therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner explains in her book The Dance of Anger: “When one family member consistently avoids conflict, the others will function poorly, creating a toxic imbalance that breeds hostility.” The poster’s awakening to the abuse signals an important shift toward independence, which is necessary to break free from patterns that allow control to be hidden.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
Many users rallied behind the poster, urging her to prioritize her well-being and escape the exploitation.





A few commenters offered nuance, acknowledging temporary family needs while validating her limits.


![[Reddit User] − What does your dad say when you ask about your brother doing his share?](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762398874540-3.webp)
Others injected humor to lighten the frustration, imagining bold comebacks without escalating harm.
![[Reddit User] − I’m rude as f in a situation like this. I’d tell my brother that his d__k is too short to get in the way when he does...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762398882052-1.webp)



The poster faces overwhelming domestic demands from her father and brother, leading her to refuse cooking for them amid insults and no support, while secretly planning a move to reclaim her independence. This highlights a breakdown in family equity, where one person’s efforts sustain laziness in others.
Have you ever been stuck handling everything at home while others slack off—what pushed you to draw the line? How do you spot when “helping family” turns into being taken for granted, and what steps can someone take to exit safely?
