The user, a 23-year-old female, describes an argument with her 28-year-old boyfriend while they were grocery shopping together. The user dislikes shopping with him because he treats it like a game, adding unnecessary and expensive items to the cart while mocking the essential items on the list.
When the user attempted to stick to their agreed-upon budget, the boyfriend reacted negatively with snide, escalating comments in public. After he accused her of being controlling, the user left the store and sat in the car, eventually driving away when he refused to stop the behavior. The core dilemma is whether her action of leaving him at the store was an overreaction to his childish behavior or an unfair abandonment.

AITA for leaving my boyfriend at the grocery store after he acted like a total asshole?















As relationship therapist Dr. Terri Orbuch states, “Couples who communicate effectively about problems tend to be happier than those who don’t.” This situation highlights a breakdown in communication regarding a core shared responsibility: finances.
The boyfriend’s behavior—mocking the list, adding non-essential items, and escalating to loud, sarcastic comments in public—suggests a resistance to shared accountability and an attempt to shift blame. His accusation that the OP is ‘controlling’ when she attempts to enforce a mutual budget is a common defensive maneuver to avoid responsibility. The OP’s feeling of mortification and subsequent departure was a valid, albeit emotionally charged, response to being publicly humiliated and disrespected while trying to maintain a necessary boundary.
The OP’s action of leaving was an appropriate response to an escalating, emotionally abusive public scene, as it removed her from the toxic interaction. However, the subsequent decision to leave him without a guaranteed means of transport (though he had his phone and wallet) introduces an element of punitive action. Moving forward, the constructive recommendation is for the OP to address the underlying issue of financial respect privately, establishing clear, non-negotiable rules for shared expenses outside of high-stress environments like the grocery store.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.





















The original poster (OP) is feeling justified in her decision to leave the grocery store after her boyfriend escalated a discussion about budget adherence into a public, emotionally charged confrontation. The central conflict lies between the OP’s need to enforce financial responsibility and the boyfriend’s reaction, which framed her boundary-setting as controlling behavior.
Did the OP overreact by leaving her boyfriend mid-shopping trip due to his public outburst, or was this a necessary response to his immature and disrespectful behavior? Viewers must weigh the necessity of financial discipline against the perception of abandonment in a relationship.







