Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app
Continue in app Continue in browser

The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here.

Teen Makes Mom Cry After Pointing Out She Grew Up In A 10-Bedroom House With Servants, Not A Shack
Teen upset, confronting wealthy mom about hypocrisy toward house help treated like family yet kept in shed.

Teen Makes Mom Cry After Pointing Out She Grew Up In A 10-Bedroom House With Servants, Not A Shack

30

ADVERTISEMENT

Generational gaps are nothing new. What one generation sees as standard, the next sees as excessive. What one sees as harmless, the next sees as indefensible. Sometimes those arguments stay surface level, and sometimes they cut straight to the core of someone’s being.

One 16-year-old started going head-to-head with her silver-spooned mother, digging into her privileged past and uncovering some dark truths that just should not fly by today’s standards. Multiple generations were at odds, some arguing societal norms, while others felt the next generation simply must be better. But who was right, and who needed to check their privilege at the door?

More info: Reddit

RELATED:

    Generational debates seem to always hang around, with the younger generation usually having a go at archaic beliefs that they want to change

    Image credits: sodawhiskey / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    One teen loved debating with her family, but when she started calling out her mom’s privileged upbringing, things got ugly pretty quickly

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: stockking / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Her mother grew up in a 10-bedroom house with servants, but insists she was actually relatively poor compared to her private school friends

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: pressfoto / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    The servants still slept on the doorstep in extreme heat, while there was plenty of room to build them a more suitable home

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: Specialist-Air-1954

    ADVERTISEMENT

    The teen and the mother went head-to-head, with the whole family later chiming in, refusing to acknowledge their privilege or the conditions the staff lived in

    A 16-year-old was studying politics, and her family loved debating current affairs around the dinner table. Her mother had strong opinions, and when the teen disagreed, mom would give her the silent treatment. So the teen started bringing up her mother’s childhood as evidence in these debates.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    One anecdote that hit particularly hard was the part where she grew up in a 10-bedroom house in an emerging Asian country with live-in servants who slept in a metal shack in the garden. Mom did not love that, and it made her cry more than once. The mother insisted she was actually relatively poor because everyone she knew at her prestigious private school was richer than her.

    The teen went on to describe the privilege of her mom explaining that she and her friends all attended the same university with no intention of ever working, skipped all their classes, and likely paid someone to take their exams. She lived at home, painting, shopping, and socializing until she was 28 simply because she could.

    What really pushed the teen over the edge was not the wealth itself but the refusal to acknowledge it. Her mother talked about how the household staff was like family, but those staff members, now elderly, still lived on the property in a cramped two-room metal shack. They slept on rolled-out beds on the doorstep in over 100-degree heat because it helped protect the family from robbers.

    The teen suggested building proper rooms for them in the garden and got laughed at by the entire family. The garden, for context, was large enough for livestock, badminton courts, an orchard, and occasionally a traveling fair. The teen kept calling it out during family debates, and her mother kept crying. The extended family said she went too far, and her cousins were the only ones who agreed with her.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: rantaimages / Freepik (not the actual photo)

    A Stanford University study explains that those at the top often deal with the guilt of their privilege by making exaggerated claims about hardships they overcame. Sound familiar? The mother insisting she was poor despite the 10-bedroom house is a bit of a slap in the face to the people below her, so it is understandable that the daughter was calling her out.

    She mentions the caste system in India, which is an ancient social hierarchy that divides people into rigid groups based on birth, jobs, social standing, and peers. It sadly still influences modern life deeply, particularly in older generations and wealthier families who use caste to maintain social exclusivity. The mother is clearly having a hard time letting go of these archaic values.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    But the teen’s strategy is not working. She is calling her mother out, making her cry, and nothing is changing except the emotional temperature in the room. If she genuinely wants to see those servants housed properly, she needs to shift from insults to workable suggestions. Start small, build support quietly, and stop using her mother’s guilt as a debate tactic.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Psychologist Carl E. Pickhardt points out that arguing with parents is part of the process through which individual identity is expressed and social independence is gained. The mother needs to understand that her daughter is not attacking her personally; she is forming her own moral compass. And the daughter needs to understand that shaming someone into change rarely works.

    How do you think the teen could better approach this subject with her mom? Share some suggestions in the comments!

    The internet was very divided on whether the teen is holding her mother accountable or just making her cry without offering any real solutions

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Poll Question

    Total votes ·

    Thanks! Check out the results:

    Total votes ·
    Share on Facebook
    Louise Pieterse

    Louise Pieterse

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    This lazy panda forgot to write something about itself.

    Read less »
    Louise Pieterse

    Louise Pieterse

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    This lazy panda forgot to write something about itself.

    What do you think ?
    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    2 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP isn't TA for wanting to point out her mother's delusions, but OP will never, ever win that "argument". OP will never convince her mother of reality, because her mother does not want reality to be... well, what actually happened/is still happening XD All OP is doing is making herself angry and frustrated, because she's trying to convince someone who doesn't think that they're wrong in any way, shape, or form. I did this myself for decades with my own mother (though it was about how my mother ábused me through my entire childhood/young adulthood, not about privilege) and my mother never once believed any argument/proof/etc. of mine and is to this day convinced that she did nothing wrong and that all the beatings were totally acceptable. People who do not want to be convinced of something will NOT be convinced of something, no matter how much logic/facts you use.

    Lola July
    Community Member
    21 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh the poor wealthy mother got her fee fees hurt and most of the people think the daughter is wrong. Wealthy people always see anyone who points out their depravity & unfair treatment of the poor as a$$holes. Because the quite part is they don't believe the poor deserve any better, but they, the Wealthy do. For the most part the ones saying the daughter is TA are probably defending themselves. They don't think their children have a right to call them out on anything. The daughter isn't a hypocrite, the mother is willfully blind.who wants to sleep in a shack on the ground? She believes they deserve less and are HAPPY!

    FreeTheUnicorn
    Community Member
    2 days ago

    This comment has been deleted.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    2 days ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OP isn't TA for wanting to point out her mother's delusions, but OP will never, ever win that "argument". OP will never convince her mother of reality, because her mother does not want reality to be... well, what actually happened/is still happening XD All OP is doing is making herself angry and frustrated, because she's trying to convince someone who doesn't think that they're wrong in any way, shape, or form. I did this myself for decades with my own mother (though it was about how my mother ábused me through my entire childhood/young adulthood, not about privilege) and my mother never once believed any argument/proof/etc. of mine and is to this day convinced that she did nothing wrong and that all the beatings were totally acceptable. People who do not want to be convinced of something will NOT be convinced of something, no matter how much logic/facts you use.

    Lola July
    Community Member
    21 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh the poor wealthy mother got her fee fees hurt and most of the people think the daughter is wrong. Wealthy people always see anyone who points out their depravity & unfair treatment of the poor as a$$holes. Because the quite part is they don't believe the poor deserve any better, but they, the Wealthy do. For the most part the ones saying the daughter is TA are probably defending themselves. They don't think their children have a right to call them out on anything. The daughter isn't a hypocrite, the mother is willfully blind.who wants to sleep in a shack on the ground? She believes they deserve less and are HAPPY!

    ADVERTISEMENT
    FreeTheUnicorn
    Community Member
    2 days ago

    This comment has been deleted.

    Related on Bored Panda
    Popular on Bored Panda
    Trending on Bored Panda
    Also on Bored Panda
    ADVERTISEMENT