Every year, a father embarks on a humble ritual—hunting not for glory, but to provide for his family in the quietest, most practical way. It’s a tradition rooted in necessity and respect, a lifeline that keeps their freezer stocked and their grocery bills manageable in the face of financial strain.
But this year, the rhythm shifts. His teenage son, who chose a vegetarian path months ago, silently steps behind him as he pulls meat from the freezer, bringing an unspoken tension that cracks open the delicate balance between family, belief, and the meaning of nourishment.

AITA for making my son deal with rotting meat















As renowned family therapist Dr. Virginia Satir once noted, “Problems are not the problem. Coping is the problem.” In this situation, the son’s vegetarianism is not the problem; his method of coping with a perceived ethical conflict—unplugging the freezer—is the central issue that created a crisis.
The son, aged 15, is navigating identity formation and moral conviction, which often involves challenging established household norms. However, his action was profoundly inappropriate because it moved beyond expression of belief into active destruction of shared family resources. Hunting for meat provided a significant economic benefit to the household, meaning the son’s action directly and negatively impacted the family’s financial stability, especially given stated financial tightness. The father’s response, requiring the son to deal with the physical consequences (disposal and cleaning/replacement of the freezer and meat), aligns with holding an individual accountable for deliberate, destructive actions, regardless of underlying motive.
The initial compromise (two meatless meals per week) was reasonable. The breakdown occurred because the son bypassed communication channels. The father’s corrective action was necessary to teach consequence, but future resolution requires a deeper discussion. The father should consider implementing clearer communication protocols for significant ethical disagreements, perhaps involving the wife as a mediator, while maintaining the expectation that the son must compensate the family for the financial loss incurred by his destructive choice.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.
































The original poster (OP) is dealing with a significant conflict arising from their son’s unilateral and destructive action against the family’s established method of food preservation and budgeting. The core disagreement centers on the OP’s reliance on hunting for sustenance versus the son’s strong ethical opposition to consuming meat, leading to a punitive response from the father.
Was the son justified in taking extreme, damaging action to enforce his dietary beliefs without prior discussion, or was the father correct in imposing significant remedial and financial consequences for the destruction of valuable resources? Where does a child’s moral stance end and their responsibility to the family unit begin?







