A mother faces an unexpected challenge when her son’s vegan friend comes over for dinner, testing her limited knowledge of plant-based meals and her willingness to adapt. What begins as a simple act of hospitality soon spirals into a poignant moment of misunderstanding and cultural clash, leaving her questioning if she did right by her guest.
In the quiet tension of that dinner table, the mother’s intentions collide with unfamiliar dietary boundaries, revealing the fragile dance of respect and empathy needed to bridge different worlds. It’s a story of trying, faltering, and the heartache of feeling judged despite good intentions.

AITA for feeding my sons vegan friend meat?
















As renowned family therapist and author Dr. Laura Markham explains, “Boundaries are not about controlling other people; they are about defining what is acceptable for you.” While the OP was hosting, the primary boundary concern here involves the boundaries set by the guest’s parents regarding their child’s ethical adherence.
The situation involves a clash of values and a failure of explicit communication between the two households. The parents initially stated a need for a vegan meal but then modified this by saying the OP could ‘just make whatever we were going to make ourselves and leave out the animal products.’ This instruction was ambiguous regarding sides like mashed potatoes made with butter. When the 13-year-old guest explicitly requested the standard meal, the OP chose to prioritize the immediate guest’s stated preference over the implicit, stricter interpretation of the parents’ request. At 13, children are developing autonomy, and encouraging them to assert their preferences is normal, but doing so in someone else’s home without parental confirmation crosses a boundary.
The parents’ reaction—becoming ‘PISSED’ and immediately banning future contact—is an extreme overreaction to what was likely an honest hosting error combined with the child’s choice. The OP’s actions were generally well-intentioned, focusing on hospitality and the child’s expressed desire. However, for future situations involving strong ethical diets, the OP should establish clearer, written parameters with the parents beforehand (e.g., confirming if simple vegan sides are acceptable, or if *no* animal products, even in preparation, are allowed) rather than relying on a verbal agreement that proved inadequate for the circumstances.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.


























The original poster (OP) is facing conflict because they honored the 13-year-old guest’s direct request to eat the family’s standard, non-vegan meal, overriding the parents’ prior instruction. The central conflict lies between the OP’s belief that the child is old enough to make his own dietary choices and the parents’ expectation that the OP should have strictly adhered to their vegan requirement, resulting in a terminated friendship between the children.
Is the OP wrong for accommodating a direct request from a 13-year-old guest to eat the provided meal, or were the parents justified in reacting strongly and ending the friendship due to the perceived undermining of their family’s ethical choices?

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