The Original Poster’s (OP) son is in the 3rd grade, and his teacher requested that parents voluntarily contribute snacks throughout the year to help students who get hungry before the later lunch period. The only stated rule was to avoid peanuts.
The OP has contributed several different snacks over time. After the OP brought madeleines and apple sauce pouches one week, their son reported that a specific girl in the class is now claiming a wide range of dietary restrictions, including gluten-free, meat-free, and other limitations. The OP questioned whether these restrictions were genuine or simply due to pickiness and stated that the parents should handle their child’s specific needs, leading to a complaint to the school, leaving the OP wondering if they are in the wrong.

AITA for refusing to cater to one student’s dietary restrictions when bringing snacks for my son’s 3rd-grade class?











According to Dr. Jules Patterson, a specialist in community obligation and resource sharing, “When a voluntary contribution system is established, the burden of accommodating specific, non-medical exceptions often shifts back to the individual recipient or their primary caregiver, unless the host institution mandates universal compliance.”
The OP’s actions stem from a reasonable interpretation of a voluntary request: providing snacks suitable for the majority while adhering to the single stated exclusion (peanuts). When the requirements expand significantly beyond the initial parameters—especially when they appear to border on preference rather than medically necessary accommodations—the OP feels the boundary of their commitment has been moved. For the teacher, navigating this conflict is difficult; they are obligated to ensure all students feel included, but they cannot reasonably force a volunteer to meet bespoke demands.
The OP’s assertion that the parents should supply snacks for their child when the restrictions become that narrow is a common response in these situations. A professional path forward might involve the OP communicating directly with the teacher, reiterating their commitment to general snacks, and perhaps suggesting a simple, universally safe alternative (like plain fruit) for the specific student, thereby shifting the responsibility for highly specific needs back to the parents without outright refusal to participate.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.













The OP is conflicted between maintaining their belief that voluntary contributions should cater to the general group and avoiding the appearance of being unaccommodating to a child with perceived complex needs. The central conflict is whether the OP’s desire to bring broadly appealing, non-specialty snacks outweighs the pressure from the teacher and the parents to cater specifically to one student’s extensive dietary list.
Should the OP continue to provide snacks they feel are appropriate for a general classroom setting, knowing one student will be excluded and the teacher will remain stressed, or should they alter their contributions to align with the extensive and potentially restrictive list provided by the other student’s parents?







