Woman Forces Stranger To Delete Bus Photo After He Snaps Her Seizure Alert Dog

Living with a medical condition often means navigating public spaces with an added layer of stress. Even simple routines, like commuting home from work, can require careful planning and constant awareness.

For one Reddit user with epilepsy, her seizure alert dog is not just a companion but an essential safeguard. During a bus ride, as her dog began signaling that a seizure might be approaching, a nearby passenger took a photo of them without asking. He later offered an explanation that tugged at her heart, but she still demanded he delete it.

Now she’s questioning whether she handled it too harshly. Read on to see the details and decide where you stand.

A woman with epilepsy confronts a stranger for photographing her and her service dog on a bus

Woman Forces Stranger To Delete Bus Photo After He Snaps Her Seizure Alert Dog
not the actual photo

AITA For telling a stranger to delete a picture of me and my seizure alert dog that he took of me on the bus even after he told me why?

Heya. So this happened a few days ago, and I'm still pretty worried about whether I'm an a__hole or not.

I take the bus to and from work and it's quite a long commute. Background:

I have epilepsy. I have a seizure alert dog, and he comes with me on the bus.

Because hes trained to do all kinds of support tasks, hes a large breed dog (sheepdog/poodle cross).

Ive had a lot of seizures on the bus, so I have a hard time mentally dealing with the commute every day.

To accommodate his size and to make me comfortable, I sit in the disability seating sectionif it's available

so he can lie beneath/between my legs and out of the way. Now onto the story:

I'm on the bus ride home, and I found a seat in the disability section. I was about 2 stops from my home,

and I was starting to have a few auras, so my dog turned around and was facing me/alerting me.

The next thing I know, I see a flash.

I look up, and a man sitting near me was holding up his phone and taking a picture of me.

I was in a bit of a rough state, so I asked him to delete it. I was probably firmer than I usually would be,

but my dog was alerting me and I had about 10-15 mins to get home.

The man was stuttering and saying things like "I just wanted a picture he was being so cute

and I saw his ID badge (he has one attached to his vest that says "seizure alert dog")."

I asked him again to delete the pic and then he goes "my daughter has epilepsy

and it would be important to her to see a working seizure alert dog".

I told him there were plenty of resources online and made him show me that he deleted it.

I was then at my stop and ran home. I felt bad, because I do epilepsy activism work so I felt for him

but I was really uncomfortable with someone taking a picture of me

while my seizure alert dog in the disability section, just felt wrong.

Should I have just let him keep the picture? AITA?

Edit to clear up some things: I dont care about legality, just the a__hole nature of the situation.

I'm a female :). I live in Canada.

While I don't have exclusive photosensitive epilepsy, flashing lights make my auras worse

If he had asked me, I would have gotten out of the way and let him take a picture of my dog.

He's super cute so I get it. Edit: I didn't know about the dog tax!

Living with a medical condition in public often means navigating moments of unexpected exposure. Most of us have experienced moments when someone looked at us a certain way, curious, intrusive, or oblivious and it left us unsettled.

When that stare turns into a snapshot, especially during a moment of vulnerability, it can strip away our sense of autonomy. This is what the OP felt: exposed at a time when her neurological body was already struggling and her support dog was alerting her to danger.

In this situation, the OP wasn’t just reacting to someone taking a photo. She was balancing her need for safety, dignity, and control in a moment where her nervous system was on high alert. Seizure auras can make sensory input overwhelming, and flashes of light can escalate her condition.

Add the stress of a public space, a large service animal beside her, and the instinctive protective posture that comes with anticipating a medical event, and her firm request becomes less about rejection and more about self-preservation.

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For many people with invisible disabilities, public interactions are a tightrope walk between education and intrusion. It’s not just a bus ride; it’s a journey through a constant calculus of when and how they will be treated like a person rather than a “scene.”

What many might overlook without context is the psychological significance of boundaries. According to Psychology Today, boundaries are limits individuals set to preserve their privacy, identity, and mental well-being, especially with people who are not intimate or familiar to them.

These boundaries help maintain a sense of agency and safety, and when they are violated, even unintentionally, it can trigger stress and anxiety.

Similarly, articles from Verywell Mind explain that healthy boundaries protect personal space and prevent emotional or physical discomfort. This extends beyond relationships into everyday social contexts: even a photo snapped without consent can feel like an encroachment when someone’s internal sense of privacy is interrupted.

Interpreting the expert insight in this story helps clarify why OP’s reaction was not only understandable but also grounded in psychological reality. Setting a firm boundary, like asking for the deletion of an unapproved photo, was a way of reclaiming control in a situation where she had little.

Rather than hostility, her response was an instinctive act of self-protection. She even acknowledges she would have happily shared a photo of her dog with permission, showing her discomfort wasn’t about denying goodwill; it was about choice.

The stranger’s intent, wanting a picture to help his daughter understand what a seizure alert dog looks like, was kind. But good intentions never override someone’s autonomy. In situations involving illness, disability, or personal vulnerability, the safest default is simple: ask for consent first. Respecting consent isn’t just polite; it’s humane.

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Here are the comments of Reddit users:

These Reddit users backed OP and said taking photos without consent was wrong

Kheldarson − NTA. He could've asked first. By using his flash, he may have triggered an episode.

You have the right to privacy and to not have your picture taken, even in the name of advocacy.

niccotaglia − NTA. Should have asked for permission before taking the photo

zookinis − nta. someone is bound to come into this post with "BUT IT'S LEGAL! !!!!"

because a lot of people think something being legal makes it okay.

CoffeeBeanx3 − It takes a special kind of i__ot to take a flash photo of an epileptic person

who's being alerted by their seizure dog. He doesn't even have the excuse of being unfamiliar with the topic.

He's just a selfish i__ot. Seriously, NEVER TAKE PICTURES WITHOUT CONSENT, that's not hard to memorize.

Hell, I would have strangled him, and flash photos just cause me migraines, not freaking seizures.

You are NTA and that guy is as smart and emotionally capable as a turnip.

notreallyanewone − NTA. People feel so entitled to snap pictures of anything

and everything without thinking about any consequence/people's feelings.

I kind of see his reasoning if it was a genuine reason, but it's still in no way OK to do without asking,

especially when he could see that your dog was working

and therefore that meant that you were being alerted that something was wrong.

This group believed it was awkward or rude, but not malicious

JaziTricks − NAH. Natural to feel uncomfortable. And you have been nice to offer him alternative routes to get photos.

We can always aspire to be more angelic. And I totally appreciate your self-doubts.

But what did you do? Ask someone to delete your photo. And obviously, you were under sort of duress anyway.

NAH whatsoever. You are a nice person to even considering you should have been more polite.

Teppic5 − NAH. You absolutely have a right to ask someone to delete a photo of you,

regardless of your (or his) reasons.

MinalanSpell-monger − NAH obviously you can ask him to delete the picture

however if he said no he still wouldn’t be an a__hole. You’re in a public space people are allowed to take pictures.

These commenters believed OP overreacted or acted poorly

SethMelchior − YTA Seriously what has gotten into this sub.

Sure the guy was thoughtless to take a picture with the flash on but that could have been a mistake

but the way you responded makes you absolutely TA. I'm not saying you were wrong and he was right

but if I watched this go down I'd think you were absolute jerk.

The picture is already taken, it's in a public place where like it or not you have no expectation of privacy,

and there was no malicious intent. Just the thought of you forcing this guy to show you his phone

and prove he deleted it makes me angry on his behalf. Absolutely YTA.

KastorNevierre − YTA. You were well within your rights to be an a__hole about it, and I might do the same thing,

but still a pretty d__k move. He should have asked, but it's not like he could untake the picture.

This wasn’t just about a photo; it was about timing, vulnerability, and boundaries. She was bracing for a seizure. He believed he had a heartfelt reason.

Was demanding deletion a reasonable act of self-protection, or did the moment escalate too far in a public space? When medical support is visibly in action, should curiosity automatically take a back seat? Share your thoughts below.

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