In a home divided by circumstance, a young woman struggles to balance compassion with boundaries. Her younger brother, caught between two worlds of differing means, arrives hungry for the comforts he rarely enjoys—snacks that vanish under the weight of his quiet desperation. The tension between generosity and fairness tears at the fragile fabric of their family life.
As she hides her own food to protect a small sense of control, the emotional stakes rise. The aunt’s plea to share clashes with the young woman’s need for respect and autonomy, exposing the raw, unspoken wounds beneath everyday acts of kindness. This is a story of love tested by scarcity and the painful struggle to find balance in the spaces between.

AITA for not allowing my brother to eat the snacks I bought?




According to developmental psychologist Erik Erikson, adolescence is a critical stage for developing a sense of identity and autonomy. For the 19-year-old OP, controlling personal resources, such as snacks bought with their own money, is a key way to establish independence and boundaries within the household structure, especially when living with family.
The core issue here involves boundary setting and perceived fairness. The brother’s behavior—consuming large quantities quickly and taking snacks secretly—indicates a lack of respect for the OP’s property and an absence of self-regulation regarding available resources. While the aunt views this through the lens of familial sharing and the brother’s potentially lower resources at his father’s house (implying need), the OP views it through the lens of personal purchase and consumption management (the OP prefers snacks to last longer). The OP’s action of hiding their snacks was a direct, albeit defensive, response to the brother failing to respect established boundaries regarding private property.
The OP’s actions of purchasing separate food and securing it were appropriate given the preceding events where their property was consumed without regard for their limits. A more constructive recommendation would be for the OP and the aunt to establish clear, written rules regarding what constitutes ‘shared’ food (purchased by the aunt for everyone) versus ‘private’ food (purchased by the OP for personal pacing). This formalizes boundaries, removes ambiguity, and allows the brother to learn how to respect others’ private property.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.






![[deleted] INFO: Is he eating enough at actual meals when...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/2e51819f356e850a9f4807359f65f077.png)


![[deleted] NTA. If your Aunt wants to buy snack food...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/9e824bfd4a2166f45b4c543a8a04b354.png)

The original poster (OP) is facing a difficult situation where their personal need for control over their own purchased items conflicts directly with their aunt’s expectation of sharing within the household, especially concerning their younger brother’s behavior.
Given the family dynamic and the brother’s behavior regarding shared versus personal resources, is the OP justified in strictly separating and protecting their private snack supply, or does the familial obligation to share supersede the right to personal property in this shared living arrangement?







