Two friends share a bond built on long walks and endless window shopping, their time together filled with laughter and quiet companionship. Yet beneath the surface of their easy friendship lies an unspoken tension—one struggles with the slow, deliberate pace of the other’s meals, turning moments of joy into stretches of uncomfortable waiting.
The simple act of eating, meant to nourish and connect, becomes a silent hurdle. When one asks for a small change to ease their shared time, it sparks hurt feelings and a quiet rift, challenging the balance between understanding and personal needs in their friendship.

AITA for asking my friend to eat before we go shopping or tell me if she wants to eat?







According to organizational psychologist Dr. David Allen, creator of ‘Getting Things Done,’ managing time and energy effectively involves clearly defining priorities and minimizing ‘context switching’ costs. While this framework usually applies to work, the underlying principle of respecting finite time applies to social interactions as well.
The core issue here is a misalignment of expectations regarding social pacing and an unwillingness to compromise on a specific activity constraint. The friend’s behavior (slow eating, needing to be seated) is an established preference, but requiring the user to sit idle for an hour simply waiting creates an imbalance in the perceived ‘value’ of that shared time. The user is providing ’emotional labor’ or simply wasted time waiting, which they correctly identified as dull. The friend’s reaction—becoming upset when asked for a simple scheduling accommodation (eat beforehand or give a heads-up)—suggests a lack of understanding of the user’s needs, possibly viewing the request as an attack on her normal routine rather than a boundary negotiation.
The user’s request to either coordinate meals or be informed ahead of time was a reasonable, low-demand request aimed at optimizing shared time, not demanding the friend change her fundamental eating style. Moving forward, the user should state their boundary clearly: ‘I enjoy our time, but I cannot sit and wait for an hour while you eat if I am not eating too.’ The constructive path is for both parties to agree on activities that do not rely on one person being sedentary and inactive for extended periods, or for the friend to consistently honor the pre-meetup communication regarding food.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

It was a reasonable request. It wasn’t rude. Next time she wants to eat while you’re with her just say “okay, you go eat and I’m going to continue shopping” or whatever.

Of course your friend doesn’t think it’s a big deal because she’s the one eating. Heck, you’re not asking for much.






That way you’re both on the same page and you’ve done it without making the focus on whether she’s eaten or not, more that you’re just establishing a time to meet


The individual felt frustrated by the significant amount of time spent waiting for a friend to slowly consume food and drink during their outings. This created a conflict between the user’s desire for more varied activity and the friend’s established, unchangeable pace of eating.
Should the friend prioritize the user’s time and adjust their eating habits or scheduling when they meet, or is the expectation that the user must passively accept the slow pace as a necessary part of maintaining the friendship?







