Family Defends Brat Who Destroyed TV, Aunt Explodes And Tosses Dad’s Phone In The Pool
There’s something about family visits that feels like a reality show waiting to happen. And truth is, family visits are often a chance to reconnect, catch up, and enjoy each other’s company. However sometimes, even small disagreements or unexpected incidents can quickly turn a simple visit into tension and conflict.
In this story, today’s Original Poster (OP) shared that a visit from her brother and his family became a heated confrontation over a broken TV, a frustrated child, and a very public disagreement between her and his parents.
More info: Reddit
Many adults find themselves frustrated when siblings refuse to discipline their children, leaving others to enforce rules or deal with the fallout
Image credits: teamhead98 / Freepik (not the actual photo)
The author’s nephew asked to play in her room, but she refused and offered the Nintendo Switch in the family room instead
Image credits: Freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)
However, the author’s parents insisted the child play in her room, which led to the nephew throwing the controller and breaking the TV
Image credits: bokodi / Freepik (not the actual photo)
The author confronted her brother and demanded the TV be replaced, but he and his wife refused, accusing her of overreacting
Image credits: Academic_Conflict743
In retaliation, she smashed her brother’s phone, which ultimately fell into the pool, escalating the conflict and ruining the family visit
The OP shared that she’s fresh out of college, working an entry-level job, and still lives at home with her parents. One day, when her brother came over to visit with his family, her nephew got bored and asked to play video games in the OP’s room. The OP, however, told the nephew he couldn’t come into the room, but that she would bring the Nintendo Switch out to the family room instead.
The OP’s parents, though, didn’t want noise in the family room, so they insisted the OP allowed the nephew play in her room. If you’ve ever watched a child lose at a video game, you know the danger because sure enough, the nephew got mad mid-game and hurled the controller straight at the TV. The TV was destroyed, and a bold black line was slashed down the screen.
The OP immediately dragged the nephew to the living room, told everyone what happened, and demanded the TV be replaced. However, her nephew’s mom called it an accident, and the dad then suggested that since the OP “basically lives at home for free”, she should cover the damage himself.
The brother and sister-in-law also accused the OP of manhandling their child. The brother even threatened to call the police for child maltreatment, and outrightly refused to replace the TV. At that point, the OP grabbed her brother’s phone and smashed it on the ground. That shifted the focus, then, as the brother now had to replace the expensive phone which was four times the price of the damaged TV.
Image credits: SkelDry / Freepik (not the actual photo)
In situations like the one in this family drama, it’s easy to see how a child’s impulsive behavior can spiral into chaos. Child Mind Institute explains that younger children often struggle to control impulses, particularly in competitive or high-stakes situations.
Their brains are still developing areas responsible for self-regulation and decision-making, which means they may act out or react aggressively, when games or challenges don’t go their way. However, experts at Empowering Parents caution against excusing these actions as “just accidents”. While genuine accidents lack intent, children still need to see the consequences of their behavior to learn responsibility.
To prevent escalations like those in the story, Impact Psyche emphasizes the importance of clear, consistent boundaries. Parents and adults dealing with kids should communicate rules in an age-appropriate way, explain the reasons behind them, and enforce them calmly. When these strategies are applied, children are more likely to understand expectations, manage frustration, and interact respectfully.
Netizens sided strongly with the OP, expressing frustration at the family’s lack of accountability. They also defended her retaliatory action, noting that while smashing the phone wasn’t ideal, it was a reaction to the family ignoring the real issue. Would you have handled the situation differently than the OP, or do you think she was justified? We would love to know your thoughts!
Netizens emphasized that teaching responsibility is key, and letting children, or even adults, get away with damaging behavior only fuels more problems
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
When I was young I burned a good saucepan trying to make porridge and being impatient with the milk despite mom explaining in detail why I had to do it slowly. In my attempt to clean up the mess, I made an even bigger mess to the point where the saucepan was unusable. I didn't get spanked because I told her what had happened right away and owned the mistake. But she did sort out a paper round for, I think it was ten weeks, in order to pay for a new saucepan. I'm *not* a morning person. It was awful. Also, there were no privileges whatsoever for the entire ten week time. The rule was simple: I break something, I make it right. I broke something, I made it right, and I didn't feel any desire to test the water by breaking other stuff (except my own things, I did have a habit of removing screws to see what was inside and my seven-year-old mind wasn't quite so good at putting all the pieces back correctly).
What do I think? Well between this and the earlier "what shall we break?" story, I think I'm extremely glad to be a singleton with no siblings and thus nobody to foist their misbegotten crótch-goblins anywhere near me or my possessions.
Absolutely! We dodged not just bullets but tactical nukes!
Load More Replies...Sounds like a FAFO to me. No pity at all for the worthless POS parents who are raising a future convict.
No fooling! My kid breaks your TV? Tough s**t. You break my phone? Pay me! Everyone’s perfectly fine with the ruined TV, but lose their minds about the phone. What the hell kinda trash family is this? I hope she manages to escape as quickly as she can (and never invites the trash people over). And the trash grandparents are okay with their trash son raising yet another trash son, so *three generations of trash*. I’m glad the phone is ruined; I love it that the trash father sees what happens when he lets his trash kid rage-quit and destroy a TV. CONSEQUENCES, people; learn ‘em!
Load More Replies...When I was young I burned a good saucepan trying to make porridge and being impatient with the milk despite mom explaining in detail why I had to do it slowly. In my attempt to clean up the mess, I made an even bigger mess to the point where the saucepan was unusable. I didn't get spanked because I told her what had happened right away and owned the mistake. But she did sort out a paper round for, I think it was ten weeks, in order to pay for a new saucepan. I'm *not* a morning person. It was awful. Also, there were no privileges whatsoever for the entire ten week time. The rule was simple: I break something, I make it right. I broke something, I made it right, and I didn't feel any desire to test the water by breaking other stuff (except my own things, I did have a habit of removing screws to see what was inside and my seven-year-old mind wasn't quite so good at putting all the pieces back correctly).
What do I think? Well between this and the earlier "what shall we break?" story, I think I'm extremely glad to be a singleton with no siblings and thus nobody to foist their misbegotten crótch-goblins anywhere near me or my possessions.
Absolutely! We dodged not just bullets but tactical nukes!
Load More Replies...Sounds like a FAFO to me. No pity at all for the worthless POS parents who are raising a future convict.
No fooling! My kid breaks your TV? Tough s**t. You break my phone? Pay me! Everyone’s perfectly fine with the ruined TV, but lose their minds about the phone. What the hell kinda trash family is this? I hope she manages to escape as quickly as she can (and never invites the trash people over). And the trash grandparents are okay with their trash son raising yet another trash son, so *three generations of trash*. I’m glad the phone is ruined; I love it that the trash father sees what happens when he lets his trash kid rage-quit and destroy a TV. CONSEQUENCES, people; learn ‘em!
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