Parent Cuts Son Wifi After Online ‘Watery’ Streams Take Over His Life

A parent watched helplessly as hot tub streams consumed their 18-year-old son’s days, pushing aside chores, homework, and basic responsibilities despite multiple calm conversations about finding balance. Tired of the endless cycle and footing the bill for internet access, the parent finally took decisive action by restricting those specific platforms directly through the home router.

The young adult reacted with anger, accusing the parent of invading privacy and treating him like a child rather than respecting his new status as an adult. Now the parent sits with lingering doubt, wondering whether the strict step served as necessary tough love or crossed an unfair line while the son still lives under the family roof.

A parent blocked streaming sites to curb an 18-year-old son’s excessive hot tub viewing that neglected chores and homework.

Parent Cuts Son Wifi After Online 'Watery' Streams Take Over His Life
Not the actual photo.

'AITAH for blocking my son's Wifi access because he keeps watching Hot Tub streamers?'

My son (18) has been spending a ridiculous amount of time on Twitch and Kick lately.

Not for gaming streams like most people, but for those hot tub streams. I get it, he's 18, but it's kinda taken over his life.

He's always on there, ignoring chores, homework, you name it. Tried talking to him about balance

and maybe chilling a bit on those streams, but it went in one ear and out the other... He is a teenager after all

I pay for the WiFi and I'm kinda at my wit's end here. So, I decided to block Twitch and Kick through the router.

My thought process was maybe it'd snap him out of this phase, get him to focus on real-life responsibilities a bit more.

He's p__sed, saying I'm violating his privacy and treating him like a child.

I feel like I might be the a__hole cuz I cut off his access without a final warning, but also, desperate times?

He's technically an adult, but under my roof and I'm worried about where this habit could lead.

So, AITA for putting my foot down and blocking Twitch and Kick to stop the endless hot tub stream watching?

The parent’s move to block access stemmed from genuine worry: ignored responsibilities piling up despite conversations about balance. The son viewed it as an invasion, highlighting the tricky shift when teens cross into legal adulthood but remain dependent on family resources.

Opposing takes make sense on both sides. From one angle, an 18-year-old deserves privacy and autonomy, especially with personal entertainment choices. Yet parents paying the bills and managing the home reasonably expect contributions like chores.

When habits disrupt daily functioning, it raises legitimate concerns about developing patterns that could affect long-term growth. Research shows that excessive use of certain online content correlates with neglecting daily obligations, reduced focus, and even impacts on mood and productivity.

This situation broadens into wider family dynamics around technology and boundaries. A 2024 survey found that nearly 1 in 3 young adults who engage with explicit online content daily report feeling down, depressed, or hopeless most or all of the time, compared to 19% of those who rarely or never do.

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Heavy viewing has also been linked to lower self-discipline and difficulties with responsibilities. These patterns aren’t rare; many young adults in the 18-34 range show high engagement with such material, sometimes at the expense of real-world tasks.

Psychologist Sharon Martin, in discussing boundaries with adult children, emphasizes clear limits as key to healthy relationships: “Clear boundaries are a sign of a healthy relationship. Relating requires knowledge of what the other person likes, dislikes, and what makes them feel overwhelmed.”

Her insight applies directly here. Consistent expectations around household contributions, paired with open dialogue, can prevent escalation while respecting emerging adulthood.

Neutral paths forward often work better than abrupt blocks. Reinstating access with clear, mutually agreed expectations can build accountability without rebellion. If deeper issues like low mood or escapism seem at play, suggesting professional support shows care without control.

Ultimately, the goal is fostering self-regulation: treating the young person as a household member who earns privileges through responsibility, while preparing them for full independence.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Some users support turning off the WiFi as a necessary consequence for the 18-year-old’s failure to handle responsibilities, chores, and homework.

Educational-Key-5567 − Nta. He’s 18, it shouldn’t have gotten to the point where you had to shut off the WiFi.

He can p__sed about it all her wants. If he wants it so bad, he can pay for his own WiFi

Stayvein − NTA. But, he can’t be 18 “teenagers can’t be helped for still being growing kids and needing to fap”

versus he needs to get his s__t together, pull his weight, and be responsible.

Make it clear to him he can watch all the t__s he wants if he quits slacking.

It’s like anything else in life, you can’t abdicate your responsibilities without repercussions.

That’s not behaving as an adult. Forget his age, if he’s going to act like a child, then you have to treat him like one.

chaingun_samurai − He's p__sed, saying I'm violating his privacy and treating him like a child.

"You'll be treated like a child until you start acting like an adult. You're a member of this household,

and as long as you are a member of this household, you're expected to help around the house with the chores we've given you.

If you want to be recognized as an adult, be a useful member of the household, get a job, and get your own wi-fi account." NTA

Others recommend talking to the son, possibly with therapy or a third party, while still affirming NTA and suggesting trust-based approaches over strict punishment.

fitfeetgirl − NTA, but in think you two should probably talk more about it, maybe with a third party.

Due_Application_8696 − Yeah he’s 18 I don’t think this is the way to go about it

Maybe get him into some therapy he could be depressed and he’s using that as an outlet to just get by in life

Frisianian − NTA, if he’s putting things that need to get done aside that’s a problem.

I’d suggest the simple route, tell him you’ll turn it all back on now and trust him to keep up with everything,

as long as he proves that he can you’ll leave things as they are. If you do the “prove you can do it and you can have it back” route...

If don’t care what he watches as long as he does chores, homework, and whatnot just make that clear and hopefully that’s the end of it.

Otherwise, he can FAFO. Good luck!

Some users express shock at the son’s habits and jokingly or bluntly call for help or label him negatively.

Necessary_Romance − Get him help before his hand develops into a claw.

[Reddit User] − What does this even mean? Hot tub streamers? My god. Am I now my parents? Is this real life?

mofoofinvention − Nta, your kid is a loser

SelectBowl5897 − Desperate situations call for desperate measures. I turn off my router at midnight so my son can't use it.

He'd go as late as 5 am, and using headphones, so he also made loud noises he wasn't aware of

A parent tried firm limits to refocus their son amid distracting streams, but it ignited privacy debates and questions of fairness for an 18-year-old at home.

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Do you think the block was a reasonable stand for responsibilities, or should parents ease up once kids hit adulthood? How would you handle streaming habits clashing with chores under your roof? Drop your thoughts below.

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