20-Year-Old Woman Draws Line After Boyfriend Relies On Her For All Household Tasks

A young woman welcomed her boyfriend into her apartment hoping for a true partnership, yet she quickly became his full-time instructor for everyday adult responsibilities including cooking, laundry, and dishes. At only 20 years old, exhaustion set in after she demonstrated tasks multiple times, supplied written recipes, and still faced repeated excuses such as claims that meals tasted better when she prepared them.

Her boyfriend argued that relationships require mutual support, while she sensed she was being cast as a constant caregiver rather than an equal companion.

A young woman sets firm boundaries after her boyfriend relies on her for basic chores instead of learning independently.

20-Year-Old Woman Draws Line After Boyfriend Relies On Her For All Household Tasks
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for not wanting to teach my boyfriend how to do chores?'

Just as title says. I'm 20F, and my boyfriend (23M) has always lived at home where his mom did most (all) of the chores.

He moved in with me a few weeks ago, and asked me to help him 'learn' how to certain things.

I started with cooking, I figured that would be one of the most useful skills to know for him.

So every night when I'm cooking he 'helped' a bit, with me explaining why and how I do things. That has been the first two weeks or so.

This week I told him to try himself without help, I found some easy recipes of foods that he likes, and left him to try things out.

Every single night this week I've had to do a big part of the cooking.

Because he "doesn't know how to cut this", "doesn't know how to do this", or "it tastes better when you do it."

I'm tired of it. And that's just cooking, I've been doing almost all the other chores myself too.

So I told him I'm done. That he'll do his own laundry, cook every other day, and do the dishes on the days he doesn't cook.

That he can ask certain things, but only if he can't find the answer himself, and I won't show him / do it for him.

He got upset because 'relationships are about helping each other', but I feel like he doesn't want to learn and just push things off on me.

I've shown him how to make French toast twice, but he still claims he 'doesn't know how to do it'.

I even wrote down the recipe! I just want him to put in some effort instead of expecting me to do it all.

I've talked this over with my mom, and she said I should be grateful he's even asking to learn.

My boyfriend thinks I don't want to help him with anything. I think he's a grown man

and shouldn't need his hand held the entire way, especially with simpler stuff. AITA?

Edited: it's not just cooking, it's also things like vacuuming / doing dishes.

Which is why I don't think it's lack of confidence / not knowing how to do things.

He's seen me vacuum. I've explained how to. He still wants me to 'show him'.

The woman tried the patient route: guiding her boyfriend through cooking lessons, providing easy recipes, and explaining chores like vacuuming and dishes that he had watched her handle. Yet every attempt ended with him defaulting back to her, claiming uncertainty or superior results from her efforts.

Many view this as a classic example of weaponized incompetence, where someone strategically appears helpless to shift responsibility. It’s not always malicious, but the pattern creates an uneven load. One side ends up over-functioning while the other under-functions, breeding quiet resentment. Here, repeated demonstrations suggest it’s less about genuine lack of knowledge and more about avoiding the mental effort or accountability.

Critics might argue the boyfriend simply lacks confidence from being raised with his mom handling everything, and that patience builds skills. After all, some families don’t emphasize teaching life skills equally. Yet the Redditor’s experience highlights how this dynamic can feel like emotional labor on top of physical chores. Relationships thrive on mutual support, not one person becoming the default manager of household basics.

See also  Man Rejects Drunk Woman At Club, Gets Drink Thrown In Face And Fights Back

This situation ties into broader family dynamics and the uneven division of unpaid labor. Research from time-use surveys shows that even as gaps narrow, women in heterosexual couples often handle significantly more routine housework like cooking and cleaning.

For instance, a Pew Research Center study found women in their 20s spending about one hour and 45 minutes daily on such tasks compared to men’s one hour. Another analysis of American Time Use Survey data noted men increasing time on core housework (up about 20 minutes daily by 2024), yet women still shoulder more overall.

Psychotherapist Lisa Brateman, LCSW, explains the toll clearly: “Weaponized incompetence is a form of manipulation that breeds resentment and erodes trust.” She notes it often stems from documented psychological tactics like “regression,” where acting helpless avoids responsibilities.

In this story, the expert insight rings true. The young woman’s frustration is all about wanting genuine effort rather than perpetual training. Neutral solutions include clear, written expectations, allowing natural consequences, and open talks focused on feelings rather than blame: “I feel overwhelmed when tasks fall back on me after guidance.” Couples can also explore resources like basic skill tutorials together or, if stuck, short-term counseling to reset roles.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Some people identify the boyfriend’s behavior as weaponized incompetence and advise standing firm or leaving if he doesn’t change.

Diamond_Mind4321 − NTA - this is weaponised incompetence. I wish I’d had your common sense and confidence when I was 20.

He’s perfectly capable of learning how to do basis household tasks by himself.

ladyteruki − "It tastes better when you do it. " Oh no. No-no-no-no-no. That just won't do.

That's the deciding factor for me: you're NTA. Interestingly I was bringing up "weaponized incompetence" to someone else and this line is a prime example of that.

Relationships are about helping the other, sure, not raising them like a child.

It's 2026, my guy, there's Google, there's Youtube, I'm sure there's a subreddit for beginners.

Cat_got_ya_tongue − NTA. This man is just trading on weaponised incompetence and hoping that you’ll find “helping” so tedious that you take over.

It’s actually pretty disgusting that he never thought to learn before living with you.

If he really wanted to be helpful he would have asked Mummy for lessons before moving in.

i_declareathumbwar − NTA, weaponised incompetence alert. He is making you do everything. Stick firm and leave if he won't do his fair share.

[Reddit User] − NTA. If this carries on, please leave him. Guys like this don’t tend to change. They expect you to do everything and contribute nothing.

ArcanTemival − Youtube is a thing that exists. NTA.

Some people explain that the boyfriend is deliberately acting incompetent to avoid responsibilities and urge the OP not to fall for it.

MissionRevolution306 − NTA. Google Weaponized Incompetence.

Tiseye − NTA Your boyfriend thinks if he acts like a stupid mug long enough, you'll do it all.

Just be careful about your woolens and bras, he might put them in on 60C just to make sure he doesn't have to do laundry anymore.

Ruskiwasthebest1975 − My hubby tried weaponised incompetence once.

“Oh but it only takes you 5 mins to iron my shirt and it takes me half an hour” My reply? “Well that just tells me you need more practice”.

Ejclincoln − NTA, reading the last section explains everything you need to know. His Mummy obv did everything,

you shouldn’t be grateful that he wants to help, you should be able to expect he’ll do his share. That’s the difference.

Wonder if it’s the same if he has a sister or is his Mum someone who just does it all.

Both of my children (male and female) can cook and know how to clean (actually doing it is a different matter….…). They’re important skills to pass on in my book.

Wrapping up this domestic drama, it’s clear that expecting a grown partner to step up on basics is essential for balance. Do you think the Redditor’s boundaries were fair given the repeated demonstrations, or did the boyfriend deserve more grace as a newbie to independent living?

See also  He Said It Was “Just A Kiss.” Seven Years Later, She’s Wondering What Else He Never Told Her

How would you handle dividing chores when one person comes from a hands-off background? Share your hot takes below!

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved