Quote #169306
Sometimes you can’t prioritise family and you feel guilty.
Adam Sandler
About This Quote
This quote needs no introduction—at least for now. We're working on adding more context soon.
Interpretation
The line captures a common tension in modern working life: the clash between professional obligations and the desire (or expectation) to put family first. It acknowledges that prioritization is not always fully within one’s control—deadlines, travel, and public-facing commitments can force choices that conflict with personal ideals. The second clause, “and you feel guilty,” points to the emotional cost of that mismatch: guilt becomes a byproduct of caring, not necessarily of wrongdoing. Read as a candid admission rather than a moral lesson, the quote normalizes ambivalence and suggests that even people with resources and status can experience the same family–work tradeoffs as anyone else.




