No. Absolutely, positively not. No.
I am utterly astounded at the immense selfishness of the girl in question. The mother, while it is difficult for her to feel resentment, has every right to resent (maybe not her daughter) but her daughter's horribly selfish actions.
The ENTIRE family is going through something horrible and painful. The ENTIRE family needs to get it together and pull together to make things work.
How difficult is it to sweep floors? How long would that single chore take? One hour. Max. And I'm being generous and taking into consideration it might be a big house. How difficult is it to wash dishes? Fifteen minutes. Dust? Again, one hour.
One hour out of the day. That is INCREDIBLY small penance to the woman who birthed, raised, and CARES for her. That is a drop in the bucket compared to the father who brings home the dough AND does a ton of housework too. One hour every other day, half an hour when she gets home, fifteen minutes before going out with her friends is hardly anything to have drama about. It only means she'll have less time to spend with her friends, and, oh, God forbid, two or three days out of the week she might not see her friends.
Steriotypical teenagers.
What happens if one of her friends finds themselves in the situation her mom is? Would she dump that friend too, claiming that she needs to have fun before 'living in the real world'? Honey, the second you're BORN you live in the real world. In my family, it's a point of pride to be able to help our older, not-so-able reletives to maintaine a good, nurturing way of life. And yes, they go to school and work. In a third world country (Philippines). And guess what? They go out with their friends too. They have fun. They're always smiling, and they have it a TON harder than most people here in the US.
I am just amazed at how lax so many parents are. They think they're nurturing some idiot sense of innocence and childlikeness before they hit 'the real world'? No. I have friends who think like this girl thinks, and their parents let them get away with it.
They have no idea how to use a mop, they can't cook anything other than hot pockets and GOD help them if they ever even look at laundry. Part of the later years with our parents is about learning the practical, everyday skills we need in our day-to-day lives. Even if mom is 100% fine, I'd still be astounded for her to let her practically grown daughter flounce through life unaware of the neccessity or practice of basic life skills.
She's not asking her to scrub the bathroom grout with a toothbrush, for Christ's sake! She's asking for help with such basic, frivolous chores that doing them when they need to be done should be second nature by now. These things take hardly any time and, aside from dishes, don't even need to be done every single day.
Who am I to judge? At seventeen I worked, I studied, I went out with friends and I participated in Saturday Morning House Cleaning. At nineteen I worked 12 hours a day (if you include commute) and, yes, I studied, I went out with friends and I participated in Saturday Morning House Cleaning.
There are things more important than friends. Helping your ill mother, and spending time with her is one of them. I don't care what psychobabble people toss at me. I love my mom, and god forbid if she EVER fell ill you're darn right I'll be putting off movie night to Sunday evening and limiting coffee outings to one or two hours to help her out and spend time with her.
And, guess what? I'd do the same thing for a friend who fell ill, too.
It isn't just about the parents. It's about the person their daughter is and how horribly selfish she is that she can't spare a bit of time here and there to help out with incredibly easy things. Like I said, it isn't even expected to be done every day, and they are incredibly simple chores.
I can only wonder what will happen when she gets older and she's the one who's in need. Karma happens.
Enjoy, you selfish brat.