Girlfriend Teaches Boyfriend To Boil Eggs, But He Claims It Is Too Complicated, So She Refuses To Baby Him

Sharing a home often means sharing responsibilities. For many couples, that includes cooking. But what happens when one partner simply refuses to learn the basics, even after months of encouragement?

This woman says her boyfriend grew up in a household where women handled all the meals, and he never developed even simple kitchen skills. After repeated lessons and little progress, she decided to stop buying his expensive frozen dinners and instead stocked the fridge with easy ingredients before leaving on a work trip.

When she returned, he was furious, claiming she left him to fend for himself. Now she’s questioning whether pushing him toward independence crossed a line or was long overdue. Scroll down to see how the situation unfolded.

After skipping her boyfriend’s frozen meals, a woman returned to find he survived on fast food and resentment

Girlfriend Teaches Boyfriend To Boil Eggs, But He Claims It Is Too Complicated, So She Refuses To Baby Him
not the actual photo

'AITA for "making" my boyfriend eat fast food for a week?'

My boyfriend grew up in a house that valued outdated gender norms.

The women were always responsible for cooking and cleaning, so he didn't learn how to do any of that for most of his life.

That is, until he moved in with me after college.

He's been good about a few things. He doesn't mind helping with dishes or handling the laundry,

but the one thing I can't seem to get him to do is learn how to cook.

The only thing he can do is microwave frozen meals.

I've been trying to teach him the basics, but it seems like it goes through one ear and just comes out the other.

He still can't turn on the oven or use the stove without help. The toaster is too complicated for him to use he claims.

Doesn't know how to boil eggs, cook rice, or even how to measure out ingredients using cups.

I just don't understand why he can't grasp this but is fine with other things.

Here's the part where I may be an a__hole. I went on a trip two weeks ago for work.

I'm in charge of buying groceries (we have separate accounts) and I realized how expensive his frozen meals actually are.

Three to four dollars for each. I said s__ew it and bought the easiest ingredients I could find for a lot cheaper for him to cook on his own.

He doesn't like leftovers, so me cooking ahead for him was out.

Before I left, I sat him down once again and gave him a very long lesson on using the oven, toaster, and stove,

as well as how to boil/scramble eggs, toast a piece of toast, boil rice/noodles, and heat up pasta sauce.

I also taught him how to pan fry things like onions and other veggies, and how to tell when they were ready.

In case he didn't want to cook both lunch and dinner, I also bought things to make salads and fixings for sandwiches.

I come back a week later, and he is angry! He claims I practically left him to starve, and how I know he has trouble cooking.

I retaliate, saying I showed him what to do, and I get a whole range of excuses.

"Setting the oven/stove temp is too complicated" "He cut his finger chopping onions and couldn't chop any until his cut healed"

"He only likes the salad kits so everything is balanced"

Apparently he only ate sandwiches, canned goods, and fast food for a week.

He thinks I'm a major a__hole for not telling him I'm not buying his frozen meals, and leaving him alone to fend for himself.

On one hand, I do think it was s__tty of me not to tell him I didn't buy his meals,

and as someone who grew up in a home pretty much only boiled hotdogs and veggies,

and only properly learned how to cook after moving, out I do feel for him, but at the same time,

after a few months of not getting the simplest concepts, I'm left feeling partially justified in my actions. So Reddit, AITA?

Few things erode attraction faster than feeling like a partner instead of a parent. When one person repeatedly claims they “can’t” manage basic life skills, the other often ends up carrying more than groceries. They carry the mental load.

In this situation, the conflict wasn’t really about frozen meals. It was about responsibility. She had been trying for months to teach him simple cooking skills. Boiling eggs. Using the oven. Making rice.

These are foundational adult tasks, not culinary artistry. While his upbringing in a gender-traditional household explains why he wasn’t taught, it doesn’t fully justify continued avoidance as an adult living independently.

The concept of weaponized incompetence helps illuminate what may be happening. Verywell Mind defines it as feigning or exaggerating inability to avoid responsibilities, especially domestic ones, leading the other partner to take over. It’s sometimes referred to as strategic incompetence. Whether intentional or subconscious, the result is the same: imbalance.

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There is also strong research showing that foodwork, meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking, continues to fall disproportionately on women in heterosexual relationships.

A 2022 study published through the National Institutes of Health found that women still carry a larger share of food-related labor due to persistent gender norms. That context matters. When she shoulders groceries and instruction while he claims a toaster is “too complicated,” frustration becomes understandable.

At the same time, communication plays a key role in how household labor is divided. Research suggests that clearer discussions about expectations and fairness are associated with greater relationship satisfaction and more balanced task sharing.

She did provide instruction, but she didn’t explicitly warn him that she wasn’t buying his frozen meals. That lack of clarity likely intensified his reaction.

Still, the idea that she “made him starve” doesn’t align with reality. He had groceries. He had guidance. He chose sandwiches and fast food. That reflects preference, not helplessness.

The deeper issue here is not cooking skill. It’s adulthood and partnership. Sustainable relationships require shared competence. Learning to feed oneself is not optional. It’s foundational.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

These Reddit users labeled it weaponized incompetence, not inability

Elle_Vetica − NTA. This is the literal definition of weaponized incompetence. Why are you f__king someone you have to parent?

MarxandMills − NTA. You should search "weaponized incompetence. "

He is not unable to complete these tasks, he is hoping you'll get tired of asking him to improve himself and become a '50s housewife for him.

It was not s__tty of you not to buy frozen meals for him. Is he also incapable of shopping? He managed to leave the house to buy fast food.

Or did he have that delivered? ​ This man is not mature enough for a relationship. He wants you to be his mother.

CrystalQueen3000 − NTA He absolutely can do those things and is choosing not to. It’s called weaponised incompetence.

If he acts incapable then he can make you feel guilty for not looking after him. Toxic manipulation at its finest.

TaxHedgehog − NTA this is definitely weaponized incompetence.

If he can graduate college, he can figure how to use a stove. Don’t even get me started on “doesn’t like leftovers”

These commenters said OP isn’t his mother or rehabilitation center

Serendipity1007 − NTA : women are not rehabilitation centers for men. Women are not replacement parents.

While as partners we can all teach one another things, which you have, you are not responsible for someone

who refuses to learn and become a better partner to you.

Do you want to be with a child? I don't think you signed up to be a second mom to your boyfriend.

Weaponized incompetence is abuse.

Jazzlike_Humor3340 − NTA If he wants frozen meals, he can go to the store and buy them himself.

Or order them. Any adult should be able to feed themselves for a week. He's not helpless. He just prefers to dump the work on you.

He sounds like someone who needs to live on his own for five years to develop the skills needed to be a decent partner in a relationship.

These folks mocked the “too complicated” excuses and helpless act

yellowbunnythrowaway − info: how can he work the microwave but can't put bread in a toaster??

this goes beyond outdated gender norms, OP. NTA.

you could've told him you didn't get his TV dinners but you sure as hell didn't leave him to fend for himself. HE did that to himself.

and if he wants a TV dinner that bad, can he not perhaps take himself to the store ? ?

FitOrFat-1999 − You may be in charge of buying groceries, but when he realized he didnt have any frozen meals, why didn't he go buy some?

Or anything else his little heart desires? Your BF doesn't WANT to learn how to prepare the simplest food - not a meal, just food - for himself.

Why, I don't know or care.

But I don't think you can teach anyone about cooking who thinks a toaster is "too complicated. "

NTA. I suggest accepting him as he is or move out and let him fend for himself.

Edit: BTW, is his thinking always this rigid? Does he never have a Plan B that he can execute if things arent as he expects?

_raq_ − Is he your boyfriend or a toddler? Youtube can teach him, it's hard to believe that he is so helpless that he can't even learn.

If 10 year olds can learn how to make an omelette so can he.

Besides, why couldn't he buy his own stuff if he insists he can't have anything else? NTA. But is this really a relationship worth keeping?

YeettheFockers − I feel like I’m on here too much when I read the first line and instinctively KNOW that

the rest of it is gonna make me think ffs NTA for many reasons: 1. If he wanted to learn he would.

When someone can’t switch the oven on, they’re not trying 2. He doesn’t like leftovers so you cooking ahead was out?

The audacity is strong in this line alone 3. Cut his finger chopping and couldn’t chop until his cut healed? Oh sweet Jesus 4. Left him to starve?

You BOUGHT things he could use and YouTube tutorials are a thing - he wasn’t left in a locked house with a block of mouldy cheese,

miles away from any shops or restaurants, handcuffed to the radiator

5. Even if we ignore his incompetence and all of the above HE COULD HAVE GONE OUT AND GOT HIS FROZEN MEALS HIMSELF

WHY IS THAT TOO DIFFICULT Or do you purchase those out of your own funds?

This commenter questioned his logic about leftovers versus frozen meals

Lazyoat − He won’t eat leftovers but he’ll microwaves frozen meals? Wth?

What’s the difference? I wouldn’t cook for him till he started cooking for me

This wasn’t about pasta sauce. It was about accountability. She left groceries. He left responsibility. Somewhere between “too complicated” and “left to starve,” the relationship shifted from equal footing to something resembling parenting.

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Was it unfair not to warn him about the frozen meals? Maybe. But is an adult truly helpless in a kitchen for a week? If your partner refused to learn basic life skills, would you keep teaching or stop enabling? Let’s hear your thoughts.

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