Man Goes Viral For Complaining About $1,500 A Month In Child Support To His Five Children With Three Different Women

A Texas man unexpectedly found himself at the center of a massive online debate after posting what he thought would be a simple TikTok video about the financial reality of paying child support.

The creator, who goes by @eurisfrommyspace93, watched as his vent quickly snowballed into a viral moment, pulling in 2.8 million views and sparking thousands of comments across TikTok and other social media platforms.

What started as a single video turned into a three-part series of responses, as Euris returned to TikTok multiple times to explain his situation, respond to critics, and describe what it felt like to suddenly become the target of widespread internet backlash.

In the original clip, Euris laid out the numbers behind his situation. He said he pays $1,521.65 in child support every month for five children he shares with three different women.

“I work overtime in order to afford my child support,” he said. “I pay every month. I pay $1,521 and like 65 cents in child support. That comes off the top. That happens, my baby mommas get paid before I do.”

According to him, the payment is automatically deducted before he can cover his own living expenses.

“So in order for me to be able to do anything else, pay my rent, feed myself, put gas in my goddamn car, I have to work overtime,” he continued. “The game is the game.”

When broken down, the payments come out to roughly $300 per child each month.

But while Euris appeared to be sharing the reality of his financial obligations, the internet quickly responded with a very different interpretation. Many viewers felt the situation was simply the result of his own choices.

One of the most-liked replies came from user Honeybun, who wrote bluntly: “who’s fault is that,” a comment that collected more than 10,800 likes.

Others questioned whether the amount was even particularly high.

User Lush Libations wrote: “$300 A MONTH per child. Them kids eat that up in a week.” The comment drew more than 12,300 likes.

Another user added: “$300/mo per child is not alot. Especially if there’s daycare expenses. The mom’s still cover most of everything else.”

Even the fact that he recorded the video at the gym became part of the criticism.

One commenter asked: “Oh okay so why you on your phone?” Euris replied directly: “Cuz i already paid the bill.”

Another viewer pushed even harder: “Call you supervisor and see if you can come in right NOW instead of being at the gym.”

Despite the criticism, Euris pushed back in the replies, offering more context about the arrangement.

“I split custody 40/60, cover all their needs at my house and half of extracurriculars,” he wrote. “All the bills that she pays are bills that she would have even if she didn’t have children.”

As the video continued spreading, Euris posted another clip attempting to clarify his intentions.

“I just wanted to clear things up for the people who actually give a damn about what I got to say,” he said.

He explained that Texas child support payments are based on a percentage of income, adding that once the system kicks in, there is very little a father can do to avoid it.

“Child support in Texas is based off a percentage, and there is absolutely nothing besides luck and persistence that will save you from being on child support,” he said. “Not being a good person, not being the very best spouse that you possibly can be, not even listening and doing exactly what they tell you to do, because once that woman wakes up and decides she don’t want to be with your ass no more, that is it. Your a*s is going on child support.”

He later posted another video titled “Proud to Pay,” but the responses continued pouring in.

In a third video, Euris described the experience of suddenly going viral, and the overwhelming flood of notifications that came with it.

“This s**t k*lls your phone,” he said. “Your phone becomes damn near unusable. It is just constantly going, constantly going.”

According to him, the same handful of criticisms appeared over and over again across thousands of comments.

“My mind kept going towards Kanye West, Kanye West talking about fame and whatnot,” he said. “I’m not famous, but this is some famous level s**t. And I couldn’t imagine this being my goddamn life all the time.”

He estimated the frenzy lasted around 14 hours straight, with the video spreading from TikTok to WorldStar, Facebook, and Instagram, and even prompting messages from people he had not spoken to in decades.

“This s**t went on for 14 hours. It was the entire goddamn day,” he said.

One comment that stuck with him While many insults eventually blurred together, one particular comment stood out.

“One of the b**ches was like, ‘you need to go clock in,'” he recalled. “And that hit me. It hit me right in the chest.”

But he said the effect faded quickly once the same criticism appeared thousands of times. He stated: “The first time, hurt. After that, after I heard it 20,000 times… it’s really hard to get hurt by the same s**t over and over and over again.”

Despite the criticism, Euris acknowledged that his situation ultimately stems from his own decisions.

“Of course I am facing the consequences of my own actions,” he said. “That was never the problem.”

He noted that he had five children with three women after a 12-year marriage, admitting there were personal issues behind the situation.

“There are some s*xual discipline issues there,” he said.

However, he insisted the real focus of his videos was financial discipline and how to move forward. Rather than presenting himself as stuck, Euris outlined a plan to improve his financial situation.

“I am trying to live my life paying fifteen hundred dollars in child support a month,” he said.

His approach involves working more hours, tightening his budget, and going back to school to improve his earning potential.

“My solution, what I chose to do, is to work more often, be more creative with my financing, be more aggressive with my budgeting, and go back to school full-time.”

He said he has been in and out of academic programs for about 14 years and plans to finally complete his master’s degree, with the goal of landing a better-paying role in healthcare administration.

“Finish school, go back and get my master’s, and get a better job at a nine to five, college or something like that, climbing the corporate ladder at somebody’s hospital.”

Despite the viral backlash, Euris made it clear he was not looking for sympathy. “I don’t want your f**king sympathy. I don’t care how you feel,” he said.

He also pushed back on the idea that his original video was meant as a complaint. “I’m proud to take care of my kids,” he said. “If anything, in my original video, I was bragging about it.”

Even if most viewers did not see it that way, he suggested the internet often decides on its own narrative.

“You don’t know me or my situation,” he added. “Y’all are just mean and need therapy.”