The user, a 27-year-old woman, describes a recurring issue involving shared lunch orders at her office. Every Wednesday, coworkers coordinate a takeout order from a local, highly-regarded pizza place that requires a minimum of five pizzas and does not deliver. For the last three months, since the user changed her lunch hour, her order has consistently been ‘forgotten’ from the shared Excel spreadsheet.
The user sits directly next to Kevin, the 31-year-old male employee who collects the money and places the order. Despite her repeated attempts to submit her order, Kevin has claimed he either missed her entry or that the order was placed just before she added it. After being excluded again last Wednesday, the user decided to escalate the situation, leading to immediate tension in the workplace. She wonders if her reaction was justified.

AITA for making my entire office jealous after they “forgot” to include me in the group lunch order again?
















In the field of workplace dynamics, Dr. Kendall Price is known for noting, “Informal workplace agreements, while seemingly trivial, are powerful indicators of group inclusion and social capital. When these norms are weaponized, the resulting conflict is rarely about the subject matter, but about respect and belonging.”
The OP’s situation escalated beyond a simple forgotten order; it became a pattern of exclusion orchestrated by Kevin, likely due to the OP’s schedule change or an unknown personal slight. By sitting next to Kevin, the exclusion became a deliberate, visible act, creating significant emotional labor for the OP each week. The OP’s decision to contact the owner directly, while effective in securing her pizza, was an act of assertive retaliation rather than direct conflict resolution. It effectively shifted the blame and exposed Kevin’s actions to a wider audience, causing a social disruption.
While the OP achieved immediate vindication and a delicious lunch, the fallout—tension and the potential loss of Kevin’s coordination role—demonstrates the collateral damage of public, calculated payback. A less confrontational, though perhaps less satisfying, initial step might have involved addressing Kevin privately about the pattern, stating clearly that the exclusions were unacceptable. However, given the duration and proximity of the issue, the OP’s decisive action served as a necessary, albeit dramatic, boundary enforcement against continued petty harassment.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.







The original poster (OP) reached a point of frustration after months of being intentionally excluded from a group lunch order by a coworker, Kevin. Her action involved bypassing the group dynamic to secure her own lunch directly with the restaurant owner, which resulted in a very public display of her success while simultaneously exposing Kevin’s petty behavior to the rest of the office.
The core conflict lies between the OP’s right to participate in an informal workplace amenity and the coworker’s decision to use that system to exclude her. Was the OP’s calculated escalation an appropriate and effective way to enforce boundaries against persistent exclusion, or did her method create unnecessary and damaging office drama?







