A mother’s heart breaks quietly as she watches her 17-year-old son struggle with a hidden enemy—wheat. What began as mysterious gut issues unfolded into a life-altering diagnosis, thrusting them both into a relentless battle of vigilance, sacrifice, and hope. Despite endless research, costly substitutions, and countless warnings, the boy’s youthful independence clashes with the harsh reality of his allergy.
The fragile thread of trust frays when temptation and social pressures lead him to unsafe choices, triggering painful consequences that no parent wants to witness. At seventeen, he is old enough to understand but still young enough to falter, leaving his mother caught between protecting him and letting him grow. Their journey is a poignant reminder of the delicate balance between freedom and care in the face of invisible threats.

AITA for refusing to cook gluten free or take my near adult son out to eat?














As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a severe boundary breakdown where the son is demanding accommodation without reciprocating responsibility, and the parent is struggling to define the necessary limits to protect their own resources and sanity.
The core conflict here involves autonomy versus accountability, complicated by the fact that the allergy presents real physical risks. While the son, at 17, is transitioning toward adulthood and should assume responsibility for his choices, his actions—eating known allergens, causing visible illness (hives, car odor), and then complaining of pain—demonstrate a lack of respect for the parent’s efforts and the medical warnings. The parent’s feelings of being used and wasting money are valid responses to this dynamic. Furthermore, the inclusion of the MIL suggests a triangulation where one party enables the risky behavior, undermining the primary caregiver’s attempts to enforce necessary health guidelines.
The parent’s actions in cooking and spending were appropriate initially during the diagnosis and education phase. However, after nine months of consistent non-compliance where the son actively hides his consumption, the parent must shift from managing the diet to managing the consequences of the son’s choices. A constructive recommendation is to clearly communicate that the specialized cooking and extra financial outlay will cease. The parent should transition to providing only the basic, naturally gluten-free staples available to the whole family, while clearly stating that any self-purchased wheat-filled items will result in the son managing the ensuing medical issues and discomfort entirely on his own.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.









































The parent is deeply frustrated by the significant financial and emotional investment made over nine months to manage their 17-year-old son’s recently diagnosed wheat allergy, an effort the son consistently undermines through deliberate non-compliance, leading the parent to question continuing their support.
Given the son’s clear knowledge of the allergy risks, his age allowing for self-management, and his repeated choice to ingest wheat despite serious reactions, should the parent stop proactively preparing specialized meals and covering the high costs associated with his dietary needs, or does the parent still bear responsibility for managing his health until he faces more severe consequences?







