Lady Cancels Mom’s B-Day Dinner, Takes Her To Her Favorite Restaurant Instead, Broke Bros Get Mad
Birthday presents are kind of a big deal, especially when it comes to family. By choosing a thoughtful gift, you can show someone how well you know them and make them feel seen, loved, and celebrated. A bad gift, or no gift at all, sends the opposite message.
One woman turned to an online community to vent after her brothers backed out of a deal to put their money together and buy their mom a big joint birthday gift. Their reason? Too broke. With weeks of planning out the window, she took drastic action.
More info: Reddit
You’re pretty much expected to go the extra mile for family but, without boundaries, you can end up in less-than-ideal situations
Image credits: teksomolika / Freepik (not the actual photo)
One woman, the eldest of four siblings, wanted to treat her mother for her birthday, since she always goes all out for everyone else’s celebrations
Image credits: freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)
After weeks of planning, herding group chats, and sending out reminders, the woman asked her brothers for their share of the cash she was putting together for a big joint gift
Image credits: gstockstudio / Freepik (not the actual photo)
Things went sideways, though, when her brothers sheepishly admitted they were all broke, basically backing out of the deal they’d all made together
Image credits: aGirlySloth / REeddit (not the actual photo)
Beyond annoyed, she decided to dump the original plan of cooking a birthday dinner at home and took her mom out to her favorite restaurant instead
Image credits: freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)
She invited her brothers along but, of course, they couldn’t make it, so she threw them a bone by saying they could come round to her mom’s house for cake later
Image credits: TheBolter9
In the end, everyone ended up back at the house, cake was shared, songs were sung, and her brothers got a reality check about what showing up actually means
The original poster (OP) planned her mom’s birthday like a small wedding: family dinner at home, cake, and a big joint gift. Weeks of setup, group chats, reminders, the works. The only hitch? On the day money was due, her three brothers casually announced they were broke and somehow expected her to handle everything without blinking.
Normally, OP would shrug it off. Times are hard, wallets are empty, capitalism is a menace. But here’s the thing: she’s juggling a draining job, a daily side hustle, and sheer exhaustion, yet still budgeted carefully because their mom goes all-out for everyone. Her brothers, meanwhile, just planned to show up without actually showing up.
When their nonchalance hit, so did OP’s limit. Instead of playing family ATM, she pivoted, called her mom, skipped the explanations, and invited her to her favorite restaurant. Her mom was thrilled. The brothers? Furious. They couldn’t afford to come.
OP still bought the gift (a pink KitchenAid mixer her mom had adored for years) but left her brothers’ names off it. Petty? Maybe. Satisfying? You bet. Especially since this wasn’t new. Her brothers always rallied for their dad, while their mom’s celebrations mysteriously became OP’s responsibility, with everyone else happily taking the credit.
Well, the day turned out perfectly. OP’s mom shopped, dined, and nearly cartwheeled over her dream mixer. Her brothers eventually apologized, boundaries were set, and cake was eaten. Lesson learned? Sometimes being “the bad guy” just means finally drawing a line in the sand, even if you ruffle some family feathers while you’re at it.
Image credits: freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)
OK, be honest. What would you have done if you’d been in OP’s shoes? She mentions she’s already working two jobs and basically burnt out. Like many, she’s a victim of “emotional labor”. But what exactly is that? Let’s dive in.
The pros at VeryWellMind break it down perfectly: emotional labor is all the behind-the-scenes brain work you do to keep everyone else comfy, happy, and functioning, often without anyone noticing. It’s basically managing feelings, expectations, and situations so other people don’t have to.
Here’s the sneaky part: emotional labor is often expected, not requested. You just slowly become “the responsible one,” “the planner,” or “the fixer.” And because you’re good at it, people just assume you’ll always do it. No fair.
Well, OP put her foot down (you go, girl!) but if you’re struggling with emotional labor, the experts at UCLA Health have some tips. Firstly, the people you live with may not be aware of everything you do in the background. Find a time and place to gently explain all you manage mentally.
Next up, make a mental load list and start prioritizing, this can help get those invisible “to-do’s” out of your head. Finally (and this one might be tough at first), delegate, delegate, delegate, and at least try to let go. As the saying goes, if nothing changes, nothing changes. We’d say it was about time OP claimed all the credit. Giving her brothers a reality check was just the cherry on top.
What’s your take? Is OP a jerk for doing a duet dinner with her mom, or should she have let her brothers claim credit minus credit cards? Drop your thoughts in the comments!
In the comments, readers agreed the woman was not a jerk for what she did and slammed her brothers for expecting her to be a second mom
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As a fellow Kitchenaid owner, I know your mom is going to have a blast with her pretty pink mixer. Get ready for some scrumptious surprises! You're a great daughter and any mom would be proud of you. ♥
I got my mum a purple one. She's not a huge baker but it comes in handy for random things aside from baking (eg: making sausages and plum pudding) and she loves it. I wish I could justify one for myself, but I am not a big cook/baker (I would be but not cleaning the mess wins over not baking, lol). I'd rather computer parts or a gaming console for that price.
Load More Replies...They work for or at least with their dad and they don't have the money to buy mom a birthday card? OP writes that Dad gives a good "pull your head out speech". I wish Dad had walked in on them talking about how they don't have the money sister is "demanding" and he called them on it. But I'm sure there was no conversation. Because they don't care.
As a fellow Kitchenaid owner, I know your mom is going to have a blast with her pretty pink mixer. Get ready for some scrumptious surprises! You're a great daughter and any mom would be proud of you. ♥
I got my mum a purple one. She's not a huge baker but it comes in handy for random things aside from baking (eg: making sausages and plum pudding) and she loves it. I wish I could justify one for myself, but I am not a big cook/baker (I would be but not cleaning the mess wins over not baking, lol). I'd rather computer parts or a gaming console for that price.
Load More Replies...They work for or at least with their dad and they don't have the money to buy mom a birthday card? OP writes that Dad gives a good "pull your head out speech". I wish Dad had walked in on them talking about how they don't have the money sister is "demanding" and he called them on it. But I'm sure there was no conversation. Because they don't care.















































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