A young mother, burdened by the relentless demands of adulthood, juggles work, bills, and parenting while living under the same roof as her ungrateful mother. Despite her financial independence and full-time job, she faces constant criticism and unreasonable expectations, especially when it comes to something as simple as dinner.
In a moment charged with quiet defiance, she refuses to cater to her mother’s picky tastes, standing firm for the sake of her child’s well-being and her own sanity. This clash, though small on the surface, reveals the deeper fractures in their family dynamic—where love is overshadowed by resentment and misunderstanding.

AITA for telling my mom “you get what you get and you don’t throw a fit?”














As renowned family therapist and author Dr. Laura Markham explains, “Boundaries are not about controlling another person; they are about defining what is acceptable for you.” In this scenario, the OP established a boundary around meal preparation time and scope by making food for their own immediate family unit (themselves and their child). The mother’s insistence that the OP change the menu because she dislikes fish represents an attempt to dictate the OP’s actions and time, violating the established, unspoken understanding of shared household responsibilities.
The OP’s reaction, while emotionally charged and perhaps unnecessarily harsh when comparing the mother to a child, stemmed from understandable frustration over emotional labor and perceived disrespect. The OP is already working full-time and caring for a child; cooking for three adults, one of whom is openly demanding, is an unstated expectation that exceeds their contribution agreement (which only covered their own financial responsibilities and childcare). The mother escalated the situation by framing her preference as an immediate need based on her work day, disregarding the OP’s equivalent workload.
The OP’s decision to stop cooking for the parents altogether is a justifiable re-establishment of boundaries, although it caused further conflict. Moving forward, the most constructive approach would be a calm, direct conversation—perhaps facilitated by the indifferent father—reiterating the terms of the living arrangement: the OP provides meals for their child and self; if the parents wish to share, they accept what is made, or they must prepare their own alternative. This removes the emotional reaction from the equation and establishes clear, adult responsibilities.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.





















The original poster (OP) feels justified in their response to their mother’s dinner demands, as they are a fully contributing adult who does not have a formal agreement to cook for their parents. The central conflict arises from the mother’s expectation that the OP should cater to her specific food preferences despite the OP’s full-time work and childcare duties, leading to a confrontation where the OP enforced boundaries typically reserved for their own child.
Given the OP is financially independent and shares lease obligations, should the expectation of providing daily, tailored meals for an unrelated adult housemate (the mother) be enforced, or is the OP correct in maintaining that the mother is responsible for sourcing her own food if she dislikes the meal prepared for the OP’s immediate family?







