The original poster (OP) has a coworker, Mike (30M), who regularly steals food from the office refrigerator, including the OP’s meals. The OP has caught Mike doing this twice, but Mike claims he mistook the food for his own. Formal complaints to HR have been ineffective as there was deemed to be insufficient concrete proof to escalate the issue.
Frustrated by the repeated theft and lack of HR action, the OP decided to take personal action by preparing an extremely spicy pasta lunch using a potent ghost pepper sauce, clearly labeling it with their name. After Mike ate the lunch and reacted severely, he accused the OP of bringing ‘hazardous food’ to work with the intent to harm. The OP now questions whether their revenge tactic was justified as coworkers are divided on the matter.

AITA for ghost saucing my coworker who always steals my lunch?








As organizational psychologist Dr. David Allen (known for GTD methodology) emphasizes the importance of maintaining clear systems and environments: “If you don’t control your own agenda, someone else will.” While Dr. Allen’s quote focuses on productivity, it applies to maintaining personal space and property within a shared environment; when systems (like office etiquette enforced by HR) fail, individuals often seek to ‘control their own agenda’ through direct, personal countermeasures.
The OP’s behavior stems from a breakdown of perceived procedural justice. When official channels (HR) fail to address a recurring violation of property rights, the aggrieved party often resorts to self-help measures. Labeling the food was an attempt at boundary setting, but the prior theft showed Mike did not respect this label. The spicy sauce was an escalation intended to create a memorable, painful consequence that standard reporting failed to achieve. Mike’s reaction—accusing the OP of ‘hazardous’ behavior—represents a deflection of responsibility, shifting blame from his theft to the OP’s consequence.
From a professional standpoint, while the OP’s frustration is understandable, creating intentionally harmful food crosses an ethical line in a professional setting, regardless of intent to seriously injure. A more constructive approach in the future would involve documenting every incident rigorously, escalating to higher management if HR remains unresponsive, or ceasing to bring desirable food items to work temporarily. The short-term ‘win’ of stopping the theft may be outweighed by damaged professional relationships and potential formal repercussions.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.















![Or heck, just label as as such (i.e. [OP's] food,](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/80b26e4e7c96703d7a04d805d528c3ca.png)













The OP is facing conflict because their personal sense of justice regarding repeated property theft was met with an extreme, retaliatory measure, leading to mixed reactions from colleagues. While the OP’s frustration with the unresolved theft is clear, the method chosen involved intentionally causing physical discomfort to another employee.
The central question is whether the OP was justified in using an extreme, albeit non-lethal, deterrent against ongoing workplace theft when official channels failed, or if this action crosses the line into workplace harassment and retaliation. Should the OP have continued to escalate through HR or was direct action necessary?







