Working Mom Lashes Out After Daughter Orders Takeaway For Family But Not Her

A tired working mother walked into her kitchen to find her husband and two children enjoying takeaway from her favorite restaurant. Her 16-year-old daughter had ordered the meal using her own part-time job earnings, yet left out any portion for her. Hurt by the oversight, the mom questioned why she was excluded.

The teenager pushed back firmly, reminding her mother that she rarely ate the dinners she prepared anyway and that buying extra would only lead to more waste. She also pointed out she was still a child balancing school and work, not the household cook. The clash ended with the daughter refusing to make meals anymore, leaving her younger brother hungry after school and her father upset with the mom.

A mother argues with her 16-year-old daughter over missing takeaway food.

Working Mom Lashes Out After Daughter Orders Takeaway For Family But Not Her
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for lashing out at my daughter for ordering dinner for everyone but me?'

Me (37f) and my husband (39m) have two children - Sarah (16f) and Jake (9m).

I often stay at work till late hours and don't always have time to make dinner, so Sarah does it for me 2-3 times a week.

I rarely eat dinner, though, because my job provides me with food and I'm not hungry when I return home.

When I got back home a few days ago I came into the kitchen and saw my whole family eating takeaway food from the local restaurant I really liked.

I asked my husband whether he bought it but he said it was my daughter who ordered it for them (she has a part-time job).

However, as I looked around I couldn't see any food left for me and asked my daughter where my portion is.

Sarah responded by saying that she didn't bother ordering me food as well because I never eat dinner anyway and it would only go to waste as always.

I was quite upset with her and told her that she still should've thought about me

in case I was hungry and if she ordered the food for everyone why couldn't she order for me too.

Long story short, we got into an argument and she told me that I shouldn't make her cook anyway

because she's a child and has school and work responsibilities.

Sarah also told me I always waste food because I never eat my portion and I only care because it's delivery food that I like.

I responded that I am an adult and provide for her so I can't always make sure there's dinner on the table.

After the argument, I sent her to her room and she refuses to make dinner since.

My son is often hungry when he comes back because there's no dinner for him after school.

All my friends think she was the one acting unreasonably, but my husband is mad at me now and called me an a__hole.

I'm certain she ordered the food from the restaurant I liked on purpose and wanted to make me mad out of spite for not eating the dinner she makes. AITA?

The mother relies on her 16-year-old daughter to prepare meals several times a week because of her demanding work schedule, yet she often doesn’t eat them. When the daughter used her own earnings for takeaway from a restaurant the mom enjoys, but skipped her portion to avoid waste, the mom felt slighted and lashed out.

Many readers viewed the mom’s reaction as unreasonable, arguing that a teenager shouldn’t bear the burden of feeding the family regularly. They highlighted that the husband, as a co-parent, could step up more instead of leaving the load on their daughter. The mom’s upset seemed tied to the special takeaway rather than consistent family meals, which added a layer of pettiness to the conflict in the eyes of commenters.

This situation touches on parentification, where children take on adult responsibilities like cooking and caregiving that typically fall to parents. Estimates suggest this phenomenon affects anywhere from a few percent to over 30% of youth in some studies, often linked to parental work demands or family stress. Parentification can rob kids of normal teenage experiences and lead to resentment, as seen here when the daughter pushed back and stopped helping.

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Clinical psychologist Jenny Yip explained the short-term impact: “Short-term, children feel a sense of responsibility that really doesn’t belong on their shoulders. They lose a bit of their childhood experiences because of that sense of responsibility to support their parent.”

In this story, the daughter’s frustration feels relatable. She’s providing practical support while managing her own school and job, yet faces criticism when she makes a pragmatic decision with her money. The mom’s defense that she “provides” as the adult overlooks the emotional toll on her daughter and the practical gap when the teen steps back, leaving the younger son affected.

Broader family dynamics research shows that when parents fail to model balanced responsibilities, it can create ongoing tension and affect children’s development. Experts note that consistent, low-pressure family meals support better emotional connections, but forcing a teen into the parent role disrupts that.

Neutral solutions start with parents sharing cooking duties more evenly, perhaps through simple meal planning or involving the whole family in age-appropriate ways without overburdening one child. Open conversations about expectations, rather than arguments, can prevent small incidents from escalating.

Ultimately, this highlights how modern work-life pressures can quietly shift roles in ways that harm everyone. Rebalancing with clear boundaries and shared accountability could turn dinner time back into a positive ritual instead of a battleground.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Some users believe the parent is acting petty and ungrateful toward a teenager who already provides labor and financial support for the family.

___Womble − YTA. You literally almost never eat dinner with your family but throw a fit

when your 16 year old daughter doesn’t waste her own money on food she has good to reason to believe will go to waste? Get off your high horse.

gogih7i − lol "I'm mad because my daughter didn't waste her money on food for me"

YTA - you rarely eat dinner after work. Your daughter is not obligated to buy you food. Grow up.

elmosey − Honestly in your description of the dialogue your daughter sounds like the mother and you sound like the child.

She's likely dead on that you only wanted the food because it was take out as you admitted you rarely eat dinner.

Also she used her personal money to provide, that word is important, your family dinner. What's up with your husband?

Why is he not providing dinner for your family. Maybe I'm out of line but generally parents are the providers.

Your daughter is likely sick and tired of trying to be an adult on top of her school studies.

Your fight was the last straw. Apologize to your daughter. She's doing a lot for you and you come off very ungrateful. YTA.

Allie614032 − Lol? ?? Your daughter makes perfect sense. You’re just acting petty.

If you wanted the delivery food so much, you could’ve ordered it at that moment and eaten 45 minutes later!

Not to mention, it’s her money, and she didn’t want it to go to waste. Did you offer to pay, since you’re “the provider”? YTA.

Other people argue that the parents are guilty of parentification by forcing their daughter to cook and care for her brother.

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Upstairs-Banana41 − YTA... for your obnoxious behaviour, and also for making her cook dinners for the entire family on a regular basis.

Why don't you ask your husband to cook? You're the parents here.

The__Riker__Maneuver − It's not your daughter's job to raise her brother or take care of YOUR husband. YTA

meu03149 − YTA - you said it yourself, you rarely eat at home. So why the hell would she waste her money buying you something you probably wouldn’t eat?

Stop whining, and also stop parentifying your daughter

lady_wildcat − YTA. If your son is going hungry because his sister isn’t cooking, you’ve parentified your daughter.

Many commenters highlight the daughter’s maturity and logical reasoning regarding food waste compared to the original poster’s behavior.

goldfishgiggles − Yes YTA. She's right, it is not her responsibility to have to make dinner for the family as a teenager.

What does your husband, the adult, do when he gets home? And if you're constantly not eating the food that she took the time to make,

can you blame her for trying to prevent some wastage and not ordering for you too?

You really did just get upset because it's your preferred takeout place, and you take what she makes for granted.

Also, YOU AND YOUR HUSBAND are the reason your son is hungry when he gets home from school. Just wanted to make that clear.

Creepy_Addict − I am laughing. I can't even. YTA Your daughter shouldn't HAVE to cook dinner for your family.

If YOU can't be there to do it, then it is your HUSBAND'S job. What you are doing is called parentification. It is a form of child abuse.

I shouldn't make her cook anyway because she's a child and has school and work responsibilities. Your daughter is correct.

she didn't bother ordering me food as well because I never eat dinner anyway and it would only go to waste as always.

Again, she is correct. Be the parent, don't expect a 16 y/o CHILD to do it for you.

In the end, this family dinner drama shows how quickly everyday oversights can reveal bigger cracks in household roles. The mom’s late nights and the daughter’s extra duties created a perfect storm of hurt feelings and finger-pointing.

Do you think the Redditor’s reaction to the missing takeaway was fair given the lifelong stakes of family support, or did emotions get the better of her? How would you handle dividing dinner responsibilities without turning a teen into the default cook? Share your hot takes below!

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