Wife Finally Snaps After Years Of Her Husband Making The Same Insulting Joke About Her Cooking

Sometimes, a “harmless” joke can build up over time and start to feel more hurtful than funny. This original poster (OP), 32, has been dealing with her husband, 34, making jokes about her cooking for years.

From comments like “Is this edible?” to “What did I do to deserve this?” OP has laughed it off until now. After years of these jokes, she finally told him it was no longer funny and made her feel unappreciated.

Her husband, however, didn’t understand why she was upset and dismissed it as just a joke. He believes she’s being too sensitive, but OP feels that jokes should be enjoyable for everyone involved.

Did OP take things too seriously, or was it time to address the ongoing behavior? Keep reading to see what others think about this situation!

After years of joking, wife tells husband she feels unappreciated for her cooking

Wife Finally Snaps After Years Of Her Husband Making The Same Insulting Joke About Her Cooking
not the actual photo

'AITAH for telling my husband his "jokes" about my cooking aren't funny anymore?'

I (32F) do most of the cooking in our house.

My husband (34M) has this running joke where he'll make comments like "oh, is this edible?"

or "what did I do to deserve this?" I used to laugh it off

but it's been years now and I'm tired of it.

Last night I made a really nice dinner and he made another joke.

I put down my fork and said "I need you to stop. It's not funny.

It just makes me feel like you don't appreciate what I do."

He said I was being too sensitive and that he's just joking.

I told him joking is supposed to be funny for both people.

Now he's acting like I started a fight over nothing.

AITAH for finally saying something?

In relationships, communication is key, and the underlying emotional truth here is that you’ve reached a point where a recurring issue has started to weigh heavily on you.

For a long time, you have been quietly absorbing what felt like playful jokes from your husband, but over time, they’ve stopped being funny and have instead left you feeling unappreciated.

This happens more often than one might think, small comments that seem insignificant in the moment can build up over time and shift from playful teasing to something that feels hurtful.

From an emotional perspective, it’s important to recognize that humor is highly subjective.

What may seem like harmless banter to one person can carry a completely different weight for someone else, especially when it touches on something as personal as the work and care you put into cooking for your family.

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It’s completely understandable to want your efforts recognized and appreciated. In fact, this need for acknowledgment isn’t about ego, but about feeling valued for what you contribute to your shared life.

When your husband’s jokes repeatedly undermine this, it starts to erode the appreciation you naturally desire in a partnership.

By finally expressing how these comments affect you, you’re doing the responsible thing by communicating your feelings openly rather than bottling them up.

Psychologically, humor in relationships is a complex dynamic. When a partner’s humor repeatedly targets something as personal as your contributions, it shifts from fun teasing to emotional harm, even if unintentional.

This is especially true if one partner feels like their actions are not being respected or valued.

In this case, your request for your husband to stop making those comments is not an overreaction. It’s a boundary you’ve set to protect your emotional well-being and maintain respect in the relationship.

It’s also a sign of maturity, showing that you are learning to advocate for yourself rather than letting negative patterns continue unchecked.

It’s also important to acknowledge that your husband might not fully understand the impact his comments have had. He could be dismissing your feelings because he sees it as a joke, unaware of how much it has hurt you.

In relationships, this kind of disconnect is common when one partner doesn’t recognize the emotional weight their words carry.

It’s crucial that you both have an open and honest conversation about this, where you not only express your feelings but also listen to his perspective.

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The goal should be to work together toward understanding each other’s needs, and fostering an environment where both partners feel appreciated.

So, no, you’re not in the wrong for addressing this. It’s an important step toward better communication and mutual respect in your relationship.

By voicing your discomfort, you’ve opened the door to a healthier, more understanding dynamic between you and your husband.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

This group focused on the sheer lack of humor and maturity in the husband’s “joke”

gowthambusiness − " A joke is not a joke, if you say it 100 times " And that's true

Devri30 − NTA. I used to make jokes like that about my mom's cooking.

When I was 11! My dad scolded me once and I've never done it again.

He should have a better sense of humor than that of a pre-teen.

Top-Bit85 − Stop cooking for him. Cook just for you and when he asks why tell him.

I'd also go after his sense of humor.

Telling the same tired joke every night for a year means he does not have one.

He's not funny and he's rude. Time to reevaluate the relationship.

These Redditors pointed out the more toxic elements of the husband’s behavior

YoullBruiseTheEggs − NTA. This is Man-Child behavior at a baseline,

and then when you told him “you’re hurting me”

he said “No, I’m not. And if I am it’s because you’re too sensitive. ”

it starts to approach manipulation.

Virtual-Tutor7404 − NTA. "He said I was being too sensitive and that he's just joking"

is flat out not how a mature person should communicate

to someone they love when they bring something up that bothers them.

That is what an a__hole does.

MariaInconnu − He's negging you to make you believe no one else would ever want you.

This group offered a direct, functional solution: stop cooking for him

dinkidoo7693 − NTA- he can cook his own food

Brilliant-Bus-3862 − Stop cooking for him.

meekie03 − My dads this “jokester” type too, loves to crack jokes

and make fun of everyone but himself.

He used to joke around about my moms cooking, saying eggs were crunchy

or pancakes like hockey pucks or whatever.

She’d wave him off but eventually I think it got to her so much

that she lost a lot of self confidence unfortunately.

Suffice to say she doesnt cook anymore and my dad does all of it.

I’d do the same with your husband and stop cooking for that fool immediately.

Then he can see whos laughing.

showard995 − Guess what? He’s now cooking every night!

These folks leaned into petty, mirror-image revenge

Namethypoison1 − Use it once after s__, same disappointed tone,

same 'what did I do to deserve THAT' maybe add a sigh

and tell him he can't take a joke when his ego gets the sad. 🤷‍♀️

meski_oz − Put a can of baked beans and a can opener in front of him.

"Is it edible? " "I don't know, ask Heinz"

The OP’s feelings are completely valid, repeated jokes that undermine her efforts can wear down someone’s patience, especially when they’re not received as lighthearted fun anymore.

She communicated her feelings honestly, hoping for understanding, but her husband dismissed her concerns. While humor is important in relationships, mutual respect should come first.

Do you think the OP was justified in speaking up, or should she have let it slide? How would you handle a partner’s humor that feels hurtful over time? Share your thoughts below!

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