The original poster (OP) recounted a situation involving a reservation made by their sister for a large group dinner at a Brazilian steakhouse for twelve people. This reservation came with an expectation that the OP and their vegetarian wife would cover the entire cost for the group.
The OP privately addressed the issue with the sister, noting that the restaurant choice excluded their wife, who has been vegetarian for twenty years, from enjoying the main offerings. The sister dismissed this concern, suggesting the wife should just eat a salad to ‘take one for the team’ and save the OP a small amount. The OP ultimately cancelled the expensive reservation and instead arranged for catered food at home that everyone could eat, leading to public conflict.

AITAH for canceling a reservation that my sister made for 12 people at an expense steakhouse with the expectation for my vegetarian wife and I to pay for everyone.





As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation clearly tests the boundaries set within this sibling relationship, specifically regarding financial responsibility, consideration for dietary needs, and public versus private conflict resolution.
The sister demonstrated a significant lack of empathy and respect for the OP’s wife by suggesting she compromise her long-held values (vegetarianism) for a nominal financial saving for the OP. Furthermore, expecting the OP to pay for a $1,200 meal for twelve people, while knowing his wife could not participate fully, shows a dynamic where the sister’s desires are prioritized over the couple’s needs and budget. The OP’s action of canceling and catering at home served as a firm, albeit reactive, boundary enforcement against both the financial burden and the exclusion of his wife. Calling the OP a ‘cheap asshole’ publicly after the OP accommodated the group’s need for food was an attempt to shift blame and shame the OP for refusing to comply with an unfair expectation.
The OP’s action of canceling was appropriate in protecting his wife’s needs and refusing an unreasonable financial demand. However, future handling of such demands could benefit from clearer, earlier communication that sets firm expectations about payment responsibilities for group outings *before* reservations are made. A constructive approach would be to state clearly: ‘We are happy to join for dinner, but we will only pay for ourselves, and the venue must accommodate vegetarian options for my wife.’
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.















The central conflict revolves around the OP’s decision to prioritize their wife’s dietary needs and financial boundaries over the sister’s chosen venue and expectation that the OP would subsidize the entire group’s meal. The OP felt unsupported in advocating for their wife, leading them to take unilateral action to resolve the situation.
The core question is whether the OP was justified in canceling the reservation and arranging an alternative meal when faced with a potentially expensive outing that excluded his wife and demanded he pay for others, or if this response was an overreaction to the sister’s poor suggestion. Should the OP have insisted on a compromise location or was catering the only reasonable choice given the circumstances?







