She had carved out her own quiet rhythm, eating mostly vegetarian for years, except for the few days each month when her body demanded meat. It was a small, personal ritual—one that gave her comfort and control in a world that often felt chaotic. But her boyfriend, a devoted meat lover, saw things differently, his silent disapproval growing louder with each meal they shared.
The tension simmered beneath the surface until it finally erupted one night, when he asked her to cook chicken for him. She stood firm, refusing to break her own boundaries just to please him, and in that moment, the fragile balance of their relationship was laid bare—her autonomy clashing with his expectations, love tangled with unspoken demands.

AITA for refusing to compromise on food rules I have for myself when cooking for two people?












As renowned social psychologist Dr. John Gottman explains, “The secret to a happy relationship isn’t about avoiding conflict, but about managing conflict effectively, especially how partners treat each other during disagreements.” This situation highlights a clear breakdown in managing a difference in preference, evolving into a conflict about respect and accommodation.
The OP’s dietary habit, while perhaps not medically necessary, is a deeply ingrained personal routine, forming a soft boundary. The boyfriend’s behavior—initially hinting, then becoming quiet and distant when his preference wasn’t met, and finally pressuring her to cook food she would not eat—demonstrates a failure to respect this established boundary. His expectation that she should “compromise” by cooking for him suggests he views shared meal preparation as an obligation where his preference must dominate, failing to acknowledge the emotional labor involved in cooking a second meal or the simple request for autonomy over her own plate.
The OP’s action of refusing to cook the meat meal was appropriate in defending her boundary against being coerced into a task that violated her personal principles, even if the underlying reason for her diet is personal. Moving forward, the couple needs to establish clear ground rules for shared cooking. A constructive recommendation would be for the OP to communicate that while she is happy to cook for them both, meals must be planned where one person cooks vegetarian and the other cooks meat, or they must alternate cooking entirely separate meals, ensuring neither person feels forced to prepare food they actively choose not to consume.
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The original poster (OP) feels distressed because their personal, established dietary routine, which includes a small allowance for meat consumption linked to their menstrual cycle, is being challenged by their boyfriend’s desire for shared meals entirely centered on his meat-heavy preferences. The core conflict arises when the boyfriend pressures the OP to cook meat for him even when she has already prepared a separate vegetarian meal, leading to feelings of offense and a perceived lack of respect for her efforts and choices.
Given the boyfriend’s insistence on shared meat-based meals and the OP’s strong adherence to her nuanced dietary practice, is the boyfriend’s expectation that the OP must compromise her long-standing routine to accommodate his taste in every shared meal a reasonable request in a partnership, or is it an imposition that disrespects her established boundaries and autonomy?







