**My Son Dropped Out of College and Expects Me to Support Him Financially**
When my son graduated high school, I thought we had a plan. He’d go to college, get his degree, and start building a future for himself. We weren’t wealthy, but I worked extra hours and dipped into savings so he wouldn’t have to worry about tuition as much as I did at his age. I told myself it was worth it—an investment in his future.
Two semesters in, he called me one afternoon, his voice casual, almost too casual. “Mom, I think I’m done with school. It’s not for me.”
I sat there in silence, my stomach sinking. “Done? As in… taking a break?”
“No. Like, done. College is a scam. I don’t need it. I’ve been watching videos about people who made it without a degree. I’ll figure it out.”
I wanted to scream, but all I said was, “You need a plan before you throw everything away.”
He assured me he had one. Something about starting a YouTube channel, maybe getting into real estate, maybe “networking.” It was vague, like a teenager’s dream scribbled on a napkin.
The breaking point came when he moved back home. He slept until noon, played video games until 3 a.m., and claimed he was “researching” his future. He didn’t get a job. He didn’t contribute a dime. And every time I brought it up, he brushed me off.
“Relax, Mom. I’ll make it big one day. You’ll see. You just have to support me right now.”
Support him? I was paying the mortgage, utilities, groceries, his car insurance, even his cell phone. I was still paying off the student loan from his short-lived college stint.
One night, I came home after a double shift to find him on the couch, surrounded by empty chip bags and soda cans, laughing at something on his screen. I snapped.
“When are you getting a job?” I demanded.
He rolled his eyes. “Why are you always on my case? You’re supposed to believe in me.”
“Believe in you?” My voice shook. “I believed in you when I worked nights to pay for classes you quit. I believed in you when I gave you a home to land in. But belief doesn’t pay bills. You’re not a kid anymore. You’re twenty-one years old.”
He stood up, defensive. “So what, you’re just going to abandon me? Kick me out?”
I looked him straight in the eye. “If supporting you means enabling you, then yes. I will.”
The next day, I gave him a deadline: get a job or move out. He tried guilt-tripping me, said I was being heartless, that “real parents don’t give up on their kids.”
But here’s the truth: real parents don’t raise adults who think the world owes them a living.
I love my son. I always will. But love doesn’t mean funding his refusal to grow up. If he wants to be independent, it’s time he learns what independence costs.