In a house divided by walls and silent routines, four lives coexist like parallel lines—close in space but distant in connection. Each person claims their own corner of the three-story home, bound by unspoken rules and the quiet understanding that privacy trumps community. The kitchen, a rare crossroads, barely bridges the gap between strangers who share a roof but not much else.
Amid this delicate balance, food becomes the unyielding boundary of respect and territory. Three years of solitary meals and separate groceries have kept the fragile peace intact, a testament to the unvoiced agreements that hold them together. Yet beneath the surface of this orderly coexistence, the absence of shared moments whispers of a deeper loneliness echoing through the empty halls.

AITA for cooking food my roommate’s 7-year-old son is allergic to


















Dr. Robert Levenson, a psychology expert focusing on interpersonal relationships, often discusses the critical role of explicit agreements and boundaries in shared living situations. He notes that when initial norms (like ‘no sharing food’) are clearly set, deviation from these norms by one party, followed by demands on another party to mitigate risk based on those deviations, creates a power imbalance and significant relational friction.
The core conflict here revolves around boundaries and perceived emotional labor. The original poster (OP) adhered strictly to the ‘buy your own’ agreement, which is a clear boundary. The new roommate is attempting to shift this boundary, first by asking for small items (sugar, eggs) and then by escalating to demands based on his son’s allergies. When the child ate the OP’s wings, the roommate violated the ‘do not touch’ boundary. Blaming the OP for ‘leaving food out’ is a form of projection and externalizing responsibility for the child’s actions and the roommate’s failure to supervise or adhere to the food separation rule.
The OP is correct in asserting that they should not have to label their personal food for the safety of someone else’s child, especially when that child illegally consumed the food. The appropriate constructive action would be for the OP to communicate firmly (perhaps via text since face-to-face interaction seems limited) that all food is strictly separate, and that any consumption of the OP’s property, regardless of allergy status, will be treated as a breach of the living agreement, requiring immediate remedy or further action, such as involving the landlord if the behavior continues.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.

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If the kid is allergic it is up to dad to teach him not to help himself to food that has unknown ingredients
Also it is up to dad to teach him to be polite.

It is not the kid´s fault if dad did not teach him basic manners, so dad is the asshole


If the kid has so many allergies, probably this housing solution is not suitable for him.


If dad and kid are going to be living in shared accommodations, the onus is on them to learn to manage this.





The original poster is experiencing significant frustration due to a new roommate’s expectation that communal sharing should extend beyond agreed-upon items, specifically regarding food, and the subsequent accusation that the poster is responsible for the safety of the roommate’s allergic child.
Given the established roommate agreement of ‘buy your own food,’ is the poster morally or socially obligated to alter their personal food purchasing and storage habits to accommodate the severe allergies of a roommate’s child, even when the child consumed the poster’s property without permission?







