This Man Worked, Paid Rent, And Struggled Through School. His Sister Got Everything Paid For

There’s a certain kind of unfairness that doesn’t hit all at once. It builds slowly, over years, through missed chances, unequal support, and moments where you realize the rules were never the same for you.

For one man nearing 30, that realization came after watching his sister graduate college with everything paid for, while he had spent years working, struggling, and eventually giving up on finishing his own degree.

And the hardest part wasn’t just the difference.

This Man Worked, Paid Rent, and Struggled Through School. His Sister Got Everything Paid For
Not the actual photo

It was what his father said when he finally asked why.

'AITAH for being upset that my parents paid for my sisters college but not mine?'

I just need to vent really. To start off my Dad is the main breadwinner. He’s a mechanic.

When I was in elementary school I was in a college program for low income families.

All I needed to do was get good grades, attend the weekly meetings and they would fully fund my college.

My parents stopped driving me to the meetings because they were too lazy after work. Missed opportunity there.

Fast forward to college I did the two years at a community college paid for by Pell grant and was ready to transfer to a university.

I still needed money for the last two years. Asked my parents to co sign a loan. They said no. Told me to work for it.

I tried full time work and part time study and it was too hard. Failing my stem classes. Couldn’t focus after work.

Worked overnights at an Amazon warehouse and worked myself into the hospital.

Several of the hourly jobs I worked required mandatory overtime. My parents started charging me rent on top of me having to pay for my tuition.

I paid my parents $50,000 over the course of the years on rent alone. I gave up and just started working full time and decided to work on programming projects...

Year after year I’d ask them to co sign a loan and they said no. Now my sister finished college. Everything paid for.

I asked my Dad why he didn’t help me and he said “you’re not a priority” and “why would I help you when you’re going to fail anyways”.

Dad said he doesn’t have money for me but has money to buy a new $200,000 2nd house cash and a brand new truck.

I’m about to turn 30 still living at my parents house. I have my dad bitching at me about why I haven’t started my career yet and he’s pissed I’m...

A Missed Start That Wasn’t His Fault

Early on, he actually had a path.

As a kid, he was part of a college prep program designed for low-income families. The deal was simple. Maintain good grades, attend weekly meetings, and college would be fully funded.

He did his part.

But his parents didn’t.

They stopped driving him to the meetings because they were too tired after work. Without that support, the opportunity disappeared.

That’s the kind of moment that doesn’t feel huge at the time, but years later, you see what it could have been.

Trying to Do It Alone

When college came around, he didn’t quit.

He went to community college and paid for it through grants. He did the responsible thing, kept costs low, and worked toward transferring to a university.

That’s when the real barrier showed up.

He needed help, just a co-signed loan to cover the final stretch.

His parents said no.

They told him to work for it.

When Effort Isn’t Enough

So he tried.

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Full-time work. Part-time school. Overnight shifts at a warehouse. Mandatory overtime. Pushing himself to keep up with demanding classes, especially in a STEM field that already requires focus and energy.

It didn’t work.

He started failing classes, not because he wasn’t capable, but because he was exhausted. There’s a limit to what someone can carry at once, and he hit it.

At one point, it got so bad that he ended up in the hospital.

And still, there was no support.

Paying Rent While Falling Behind

Instead of relief, the pressure increased.

His parents started charging him rent while he was trying to pay for school and survive on a demanding work schedule. Over time, that added up to around $50,000.

That’s not a small contribution.

That’s a significant financial burden placed on someone already struggling to move forward.

Eventually, something had to give.

And it was school.

Watching the Difference Play Out

Years later, the contrast became impossible to ignore.

His sister went to college, and everything was covered. Tuition, support, stability, all the things he had asked for and been denied.

So he asked the question that had been building for years.

Why not me?

The answer wasn’t complicated.

“You’re not a priority.”

And even more cutting.

“Why would I help you when you’re going to fail anyway?”

When Words Confirm What Actions Already Showed

Sometimes, you already know the truth, but hearing it out loud still hits differently.

Because it removes any doubt.

This wasn’t about money. His father clearly had it, buying a second home for $200,000 in cash and a new truck.

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It was about choice.

And that’s what makes it hurt.

Family psychology discussions, including those often referenced by the American Psychological Association, describe patterns where one child receives more support and validation than another, often called “differential parenting.”

Over time, this can shape not just opportunities, but self-worth and long-term outcomes.

That’s what this looks like.

Where He Is Now

He’s about to turn 30.

Still living at home.

Still dealing with the same people who didn’t support him, while also hearing criticism about not having a career yet.

That contradiction is hard to ignore.

Because the same environment that limited his opportunities is now being used to judge the results.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Most people reacted strongly to the situation, especially the father’s comments. Many saw this as more than unfair, describing it as emotionally and financially harmful.

Appropriate-Mall9781 − NTA. Unfortunately, there's not much you can do, except save what you can so you can walk away from them.

OniyaMCD − My friend, look up 'Golden Child' and 'S__pegoat', then wander over to r/raisedbynarcissists

Fallen_lord10 − your parents don't love nor care about you. they're financially abusive. Get away from them and succeed in life. And expose them for that they can no longer...

MonkeyGeorgeBathToy − NTA

Your dad is an abusive ass.

A lot of advice focused on one idea, creating distance. Not necessarily as punishment, but as a way to regain control and rebuild independently.

PurpleEmotional1401 − Why are you still living in the home of people who have financially abused you? ESH

Future-Sock-9796 − Stop being a victim and start standing on business. Why are you letting your parents dictate the course of your life???

They dont want to pay for school? After 24, you can apply for your own fafsa using your own income, or save your money and take 1-3 courses a semester....

Are you gonna keep using them as an excuse as to why your dreams and goals aren’t being realized?

Move out and never speak to them, they are draining your potential for themselves.

Rude_Vermicelli2268 − You started strong by attending community college and minimizing your college costs.

I am not understanding why you couldn’t take student loans for the remaining 2 years.

Others pointed out that while the past can’t be changed, future decisions still can be.

Flaky_Princess-83 − NTA. .. Do whatever you have to do to move out as soon as possible. ... Do it without warning.

Once out block them on everything. They are using you. Any bets that without your rent money they might end up in financial trouble sine they have relied on it...

False-Dream511 − we're gonna get an update with a news story about you stabbing them in their sleep. ..

FortuneTellingBoobs − NTA. If they're so convinced you're a failure, waitll they ser you failing to give a s__t about them in their old age. Time to leave home forever.

It’s about support that was given to one child and withheld from another, and the long-term impact that creates.

But there’s also a harder truth sitting underneath it.

At some point, the focus has to shift from what wasn’t given to what can still be built.

Because while the past explains where he is, it doesn’t have to decide where he goes next.

 

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