When my brother left his spoiled sons with me for two weeks, I braced for chaos — but not for their snobbery.
From mocking my food to insulting my son’s laptop, their entitlement was unbelievable.
I stayed patient… until a car ride changed everything.My brother called, asking if his sons,
Tyler and Jaden, could stay while he and his wife enjoyed a luxury vacation. I hesitated but said yes.
When the boys arrived, designer luggage in hand and attitudes sky-high, I knew I was in for it.
They sneered at my homemade spaghetti and scoffed at my son Adrian’s laptop.
Every day was a parade of insults and entitlement—complaints about my fridge, my TV, even the guest beds.
Adrian tried to be kind, but the nephews treated him like he was beneath them.
I bit my tongue, reminding myself it was just two weeks.
Finally, on their last day, they refused to buckle their seatbelts, claiming it “
ruined their shirts” and their dad didn’t care. I pulled over and refused to drive until they complied.
They whined, called their dad, who told them to buckle up, but they still resisted.
I stayed firm, and after 45 minutes of sulking, they gave in — too late to catch their flight.
My brother was furious, but I told him: If he had taught them respect and safety instead of entitlement, none of this would have happened.
Tyler even messaged Adrian calling me “insane.”
I just laughed. No, I’m not insane — I’m just done putting up with spoiled behavior.
Sometimes, entitled kids need a hard reality check. And I was ready to give it to them.