He Kept Snatching Things Out Of People’s Hands, So She Finally Snatched Back

Everyone has that one coworker.

The one with a “quirk” that everyone tolerates, laughs off, or quietly works around. The kind of behavior that’s annoying, but not quite serious enough to escalate. So it just… continues.

For one woman, that coworker was George.

And after years of putting up with it, she finally decided to respond in a way he couldn’t ignore.

It didn’t go quite how she expected.

He Kept Snatching Things Out of People’s Hands, So She Finally Snatched Back
Not the actual photo

Here’s The Original Post:

'AITA for snatching things back from my colleague?'

I (36 F) have a colleague George (58 M) who has a n__ty habit of taking things out of people’s hands without asking: files, memos, communal snacks, etc.

I don’t believe it’s malicious, because he does it to everyone, and George is spacey--we lovingly call him Goldfish George. He’s been here forever and is only a few years...

His behavior causes some office strife, but people mostly ignore it. Except for me.

I absolutely hate having things snatched out of my hands. I have no other issue with George-he and I have carpooled together on several occasions, and we get along great.

Right up until I open a pack of gum, and he grabs a stick before I’ve even had one. I’ve discussed it with George more than once: “Dude, just ask.

I promise, I’ll give you some if I can. Think of it this way: if I hand you my wallet, that’s fine, but if you snatch my wallet out of...

Every time we have this conversation, George swears he understands and that he’ll stop, but then he does it again! Sometimes, it’s not so bad.

If we’re in the breakroom and he grabs a handful of popcorn I happen to be holding, whatever.

But last week, he stole a pen from literally between my fingers while I was filling out a form, because he HAD to write down his Very Important Idea.

It left a giant pen-mark on my form, and I had to get a new one. I decided I’d had enough

and that the next time he grabbed something without asking, I’d simply snatch it back. Then he’d finally understand how annoying it is.

Long story short, my plan didn’t go well. Yesterday, I was in the breakroom, eating a big bag of communal chips.

George came in and yanked them from me as expected. I immediately snatched the bag back and said, “Ask, please! George, we’ve talked about this.” Then I held the bag...

He huffed and grabbed it so aggressively, it split wide open. It was only a quarter full, but we had to clean up the mess, and George was NOT pleased.

He told me I made him feel like a child. Maybe my “here’s a taste of your own medicine” plan WAS childish. AITA?

The Habit Everyone Knows About

George isn’t new. He’s been at the company for years, close to retirement, and generally liked. Friendly, harmless, a little absent-minded.

There’s just one problem.

He has a habit of taking things straight out of people’s hands.

Not asking. Not waiting. Just reaching over and grabbing. Pens, snacks, papers, anything within reach. He does it to everyone, and most people brush it off as part of his personality.

“He’s just spacey.”

“He doesn’t mean anything by it.”

And that’s how it’s been allowed to continue.

The Boundary That Never Stuck

She wasn’t one of the people who could ignore it.

For her, it wasn’t a harmless quirk. It felt invasive. Disrespectful. Like a basic boundary being crossed over and over again.

And to be fair, she didn’t jump straight to reacting.

She talked to him. More than once.

She explained it clearly. Asked him to just say something first. Even gave him an easy comparison, if I hand you something, that’s fine. If you take it, it’s not.

Each time, George apologized. Said he understood.

And then did it again.

See also  A Grown Woman’s First Solo Grocery Trip Reveals The Shadow Of A Smothering Parent

The Moment That Pushed It Too Far

There’s a difference between annoying and disruptive.

The breaking point came when he took a pen directly out of her hand while she was filling out a form. Not just inconvenient, but actually messed up her work. She had to start over.

That’s when she decided enough was enough.

If talking didn’t work, maybe experience would.

Her plan was simple. The next time he grabbed something, she’d grab it right back.

Not aggressively. Just enough to make the point.

The Plan That Backfired

The opportunity came quickly.

In the breakroom, she was holding a bag of communal chips when George walked in and, as expected, took them right out of her hands.

Without hesitation, she took them back.

“Ask, please. We’ve talked about this.”

Then, to be fair, she offered the bag to him properly.

But instead of understanding the point, George reacted emotionally. He grabbed the bag again, harder this time, and it split open. Chips everywhere.

Now there was a mess. And a new problem.

He was upset.

Why He Felt “Like a Child”

Afterward, George told her she made him feel like a child.

And in a way, he’s not wrong.

Being corrected in the moment, especially in front of others, can feel embarrassing. It puts a spotlight on behavior that someone might not fully realize they’re repeating.

But here’s the thing.

That feeling didn’t come out of nowhere.

It came from being treated the way he’s been acting.

When someone repeatedly ignores a basic boundary, even after being told multiple times, the response tends to escalate. Not out of malice, but out of frustration.

See also  Woman Sent Her Estranged Dad A PowerPoint Explaining Why He Failed Her

She didn’t jump straight to this reaction. She got there after trying to handle it the “right” way.

The Real Issue Beneath It

This situation isn’t really about chips or pens.

It’s about respect.

Small actions, like asking before taking something, signal awareness of other people’s space. When those actions are missing, even unintentionally, it creates tension.

And when that tension gets ignored long enough, it eventually comes out in less patient ways.

Her reaction might have been a little blunt. But it wasn’t random.

It was the result of a boundary being crossed one too many times.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Most people were firmly on her side. Many pointed out that she had already tried the reasonable approach, talking it out, setting expectations, giving him chances to adjust.

owaikeia − You made him feel like a child? "CAUSE YOU ACT LIKE ONE WHEN YOU RIP S__T FROM PEOPLE'S HANDS! " I'd be messing with him at every chance...

Usual-Dragonfly3791 − A 50 year old man knows better, and so does a 40 yo, 30 yo and 20 yo. He's banking on you falling for his spacey personality to...

Beautiful_Arm8364 − He should be made to feel like a child, because he is a child. Stop coddling this person. Call him out every single time.

Others were more blunt. If someone acts like a child, they shouldn’t be surprised when they’re treated like one.

dryadduinath − nta. as far as i’m concerned, the only thing you did wrong was give him some after you snatched it back. …and help him clean up the mess...

you made him feel like a child because you reacted reasonably to someone acting like a child.

stop gentle parenting this man and start expecting him to act like an adult. react to his bizarro behaviour the way you would if any adult did it; with great...

pampooveysbacktattoo − NTA. He's not doing this because he's spacey, he's doing this because he's entitled and no one ever stops him. I bet if you keep calling him out,...

pourthebubbly − Act like a child, get treated like a child. This feels like the workplace equivalent of weaponized incompetence. “Oh poor me, I’m just a spacey boy! I can’t...

_Glam_Valentina − NTA. You talked to him multiple times, he kept doing it, you tried the most logical approach to make him understand how it feels.

The bag splitting was an accident caused by his own aggressive reaction not yours. If he feels like a child maybe he should stop acting like one.

A few suggested continuing to call it out calmly every time, without escalating, but still holding the line.

notjimbelushi420 − NTA. if he didn't want to feel like a child, he shouldn't be acting like one.

BackgroundSquare6179 − I would have said "as you should" and walked away.

Customers at my job like to snatch the pen from my hands as I'm circling where they need to sign to make it easy for them.

I'll let them sign, they'll hand it back, and I'll hand it right back and say "also here" and keep doing that.

They either catch the hint and let me circle it or get mad and say something snarky about me just showing them instead of waiting.

I always tell them, with a smile (because professionalism) "I'm sorry, I tried, but you took my pen. " It's become my biggest pet peeve to have people grab things...

RoguesAngel − NTA I had a coworker who did that. I just started taking back, calmly, even food, sometimes by holding my hand out and saying please don’t snatch xxxxxx.

I sounded like a broken record but when she told me she wasn’t my kid I simply told her “I know because if you were you would know snatching things...

A couple told me I should have let it go but I told them they can let her disrespect them but I feel basic manners are important in a work...

Sometimes people don’t change because no one makes them.

George got used to a workplace where his behavior was tolerated. Not corrected, not challenged, just accepted.

She was the first person to push back in a way he couldn’t ignore.

Was it a little awkward? Yes.

Was it a little uncomfortable? Also yes.

But after multiple conversations and no change, it’s hard to blame her for trying something different.

So was it childish, or was it the only thing left to try?

Because at some point, respect isn’t just something you ask for.

See also  Neighbor Sends Her Kid Over Daily But Won’t Host Mine, So I Ban Playdates At Our House Too

It’s something you enforce.

 

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved