Anxious Teen Daughter Cannot Order Food, Dad Can’t Help And Just Let It Be

A 16-year-old girl with generalized anxiety disorder refused to call in her Mexican takeout order on a quiet Friday night, even though her parents offered to coach her through every step.

The couple headed out for their own pub food just a block away from the restaurant and followed up with texts giving her extra time, yet she stayed silent. They picked up their meal without hers. The teen had already been in therapy for six months and seemed to be in a solid place according to her progress.

A parent sets a boundary on ordering takeout for their anxious teen.

Anxious Teen Daughter Cannot Order Food, Dad Can't Help And Just Let It Be
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for no ordering my daughter's take out food from a different restaurant than the one I was going to?'

Friday night. Instead of going out to eat we decided to order takeout. We ask our 16 yr old daughter what she wants. "Mexican" she says.

Wife and I getting pub food a block away from Mexican place. We ask her to place her order and we will pick it up when we get ours.

She (with generalized anxiety disorder) is too afraid to place a to-go order.

We say we will help you place it, coach you through it etc, but you have to call and do the talking.

She refused. Well, guess who didn't get take out? Even as we walked the few blocks to get our food I texted her saying she still has time to order.

She didn't. AITA for not ordering to-go food for my daughter who has anxiety and still getting mine?

EDIT: She has been receiving therapy for about 6 months and she is in a good place according to her.

Thank you everyone for responding. I believe I've gained a little more insight because of this post.

Some of them were brutally honest, both for and against, but for the most part, insightful. So thank you very much.

The parents encouraged their daughter to take a small step while offering support, but ultimately didn’t step in to do it for her when she declined. Many parents face similar moments: wanting to shield a child from discomfort while fearing that constant accommodation might shrink their world further.

The core issue revolves around balancing empathy for anxiety with the need to build independence. The daughter has generalized anxiety disorder, a condition where fears can make routine tasks like phone calls feel overwhelming. The parents coached her through it and gave her extra time via text, but respected her refusal by not ordering for her.

Commenters split on this: some praised it as necessary tough love that mirrors real-world growth, noting how facing fears through gradual practice helps long-term. Others worried it risked punishing anxiety with hunger, suggesting more gradual steps like online ordering or scripts might better align with her therapy progress.

Opposing views highlight a common tension in family dynamics. On one side, enabling avoidance can reinforce the anxiety cycle, making future challenges even harder. Supporters of the parents’ approach shared personal stories of how being pushed (gently) to make calls built confidence over time, turning former anxiety sufferers into those who now handle customer-facing jobs.

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On the flip side, critics emphasized that anxiety disorders don’t always respond to simple immersion like typical nervousness does; for some, repeated small failures without adequate scaffolding can feel defeating rather than empowering. Several urged checking in with the daughter’s therapist for tailored guidance on appropriate next steps, as outsiders lack the full clinical picture.

This situation broadens to the wider challenge of supporting teens with anxiety amid rising mental health concerns. According to CDC data, about 11% of U.S. children ages 3-17 have a current diagnosed anxiety disorder, with symptoms reported by around 20% of adolescents in recent surveys. Avoidance behaviors, like dodging phone calls, are a hallmark that can limit social and practical skills if not addressed thoughtfully.

Clinical psychologist Lisa Damour, an expert on adolescent stress and anxiety, stresses the value of a steady adult presence: “The single most powerful force for adolescent mental health is strong relationships with caring adults. A relationship with a great adult is like the fluoride in the water of adolescent mental health care.” She notes that teens often feel supported through availability rather than constant fixing of problems.

In this story, the parents modeled support without fully removing the discomfort, which aligns with evidence-based approaches like exposure elements in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Experts highlight that while accommodation feels compassionate short-term, gradually facing feared situations helps reduce anxiety over time.

The daughter’s ongoing therapy provides a strong foundation here. Parents can collaborate with professionals on scripts, online options, or coached practice to build skills without enabling avoidance.

Neutral advice for similar families includes starting small: prepare a phone script together, try text or app-based ordering as a bridge, or role-play the call. Celebrate efforts, not just outcomes, and ensure there’s backup food at home to avoid linking anxiety directly to basic needs.

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Ultimately, the goal is empowerment. Helping the teen discover she can handle more than her anxiety suggests, one manageable step at a time.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Some users emphasize asking what the therapist thinks and note that outsiders lack enough information to judge the situation.

pizza_toast102 − What does the therapist think? I don’t think anyone reading this has enough information from this

nycgarbagewhore − INFO: what does her therapist think and recommend regarding appropriate steps for her right now?

No one here can (or should) make a judgement without knowing what the professional thinks. You're asking the wrong people.

Also what's the conflict here? You didn't say that she was mad or called you an AH for not getting her the food so what are you asking?

Some users suggest practical strategies like preparing scripts, online ordering, or gradual exposure to help overcome phone anxiety.

Unlikely-Trash3981 − Someone on Reddit wrote out the entire way to order from Chipotle for another person. I followed that script to the letter.

I can now answer the how may I help you question without being embarrassed by my hearing loss.

So maybe she can look at the online menu and prepare a script. I just learned about online orders at Marco’s Pizza.

Once you order with a phone number they can look at your previous orders and you can duplicate it. Scripts are good I think.

I wish someone would let her practice. Her world might be shrinking because she is scared to try.

rjbonita − First step, order online. Next step text order. Then call in order.

Can even order the same thing every time. My anxious relative did this at a pizza place and it seemed to work for him.

birchitup − I have terrible phone anxiety. Internet ordering saved me from lots of stress.

Others share personal experiences with anxiety and stress the importance of not enabling it while offering support and structure.

SeaMonkeyMating − I'm not going to make judgement here, but I developed an anxiety disorder when I was about 11.

I was unable to attend school or, later, hold a job. Long story short, I'm 44, independent, working, got an education eventually,

but I still struggle with phone calls to the point that I sometimes can't make needed appointments for months at a time.

Obviously in 33 years, I've had to make many phonecalls and it doesn't get easier the more I do it.

Regular anxiety can get better with immersion, but disorders sometimes don't work that way.

Every time to this day that I fail to make a phone call, I feel defeated and it sets me back a bit.

I'm in therapy and on medications, but it only does so much. I hope for the very best for your daughter.

emptynest_nana − NTA, speaking as a person who lives with social anxiety, I refuse to say suffers, I have to find a way to LIVE WITH IT.

You have to be there to support her without enabling the anxiety. Not getting take-out one night isn't going to hurt her.

I am sure there is food at home she can have. Structure is important. You can guide her without coddling her.

Some users believe pushing through the anxiety with parental guidance or natural consequences helped them or their children overcome it.

Public_Warning_3523 − More Info needed. Did she have alternative food at home? It’s not ok to punish anxiety with hunger.

When my daughter with anxiety was 14 I gave her the option to replace her chores for the week with making phone calls for me.

She chose the phone calls. I had her call around for best prices on fuel oil, schedule her own dentist appointment and order take out.

She still has anxiety but is able to coordinate her own therapy from college these days.

girlsledisko − My parents did this same stuff to me and honestly it helped me enormously.

Unpopular opinion I’m sure, but without them making me do it I never would have done it. Now I’m a server/bartender and talk to people for a living.

TeachingFit9608 − Nope, not at all. You offered to help her thru it (which btw!)

I understand the anxiety and my therapist when I was in high school used to coach me thru the above and then report back to him the following week how...

He used to give me challenges, if you will, things that were REALLY hard for me but walked me thru step by step.

I think what you did was great and she completely refused which is on her.

In the end, this family’s takeout standoff shines a light on the delicate dance of parenting through anxiety, offering a hand without carrying the full load.

Do you think the parents’ boundary was fair given the daughter’s therapy progress and the low-stakes nature of the request, or should they have ordered for her to keep the peace? How would you guide a teen facing similar phone fears while encouraging growth? Share your experiences below!

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