He came from a world where the roles were clearly drawn, where women were the keepers of the kitchen and men stayed distant from the warmth of the stove. Moving in together was supposed to be a fresh start, a chance to rewrite old scripts, but the kitchen remained his battleground—a place where his hands trembled and his confidence faltered. The simplest tasks that should have been second nature felt like insurmountable challenges, leaving her frustrated and him stuck in silent defeat.
When she left for a brief work trip, the fragile balance they maintained was put to the test. Left to fend for himself, he faced the stark reality of his inexperience, and she confronted the quiet question: how much can patience stretch before it snaps? Their story is one of love tangled with unmet expectations, where learning to share life’s smallest duties reveals the deepest divides between them.

AITA for “making” my boyfriend eat fast food for a week?


















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a critical failure in establishing and communicating functional boundaries regarding domestic labor and mutual support.
The boyfriend’s expressed difficulty with cooking stems from learned behavior rooted in outdated gender norms, which is a valid starting point for empathy. However, his continued reliance on simple frozen meals, despite living with a partner and having the time and resources to learn basic skills, suggests a potential lack of motivation or a passive expectation that his partner will manage this domain, despite shared living. The OP’s action—cutting off the frozen meals without warning—is an attempt to force a boundary around household responsibility and expense, but it was executed in a way that prioritized financial relief over relational support. This unilateral action triggered the boyfriend’s feeling of abandonment, as he perceived the withdrawal of his familiar sustenance as abandonment, rather than a necessary consequence of his inaction.
The OP’s actions, while financially understandable, were emotionally manipulative because they forced a crisis instead of facilitating growth. A more constructive approach would have been to clearly communicate, “I will no longer purchase frozen meals starting next month; we need to schedule two specific times next week for you to practice cooking X and Y.” This approach honors both the need for equitable labor distribution and the need to support a partner learning a new skill, avoiding the creation of an emergency scenario.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.

























The original poster (OP) felt frustrated by her boyfriend’s persistent inability or refusal to learn basic cooking skills despite receiving instruction, leading her to unilaterally stop buying his expensive frozen meals while she was away. The boyfriend reacted with anger, claiming the OP left him without food and failed to support him, even though cheaper, easy-to-prepare ingredients were provided along with a recent cooking lesson.
The central debate revolves around whether the OP was justified in enforcing self-sufficiency through a sudden withdrawal of the familiar (and costly) convenience food, or if her failure to clearly communicate this change constituted an unfair abandonment of a partner who admitted to having significant skill deficits. Where does the responsibility lie for maintaining household functioning when one partner has a significant, unaddressed skill gap?







