Man Calls Out Girl For Hogging Treadmill, Ends Up Arguing With Her Mom

Gyms come with an unspoken code. You wipe down equipment, share machines during busy hours, and avoid occupying something you are not actively using. When space is limited, courtesy matters even more.

That is why one gym member felt justified speaking up after noticing a treadmill occupied by someone who was not actually running. According to him, the girl had been sitting there for at least fifteen minutes while her friend exercised beside her.

What started as a simple question about whether she planned to use it quickly escalated into a confrontation with her mother and eventually involved gym staff. His girlfriend thinks he may have taken it too far. He believes he was just standing up for fairness. Scroll down to see how the exchange unfolded.

A gym-goer confronted a teen sitting on a treadmill, sparking a heated clash with her mother

Man Calls Out Girl For Hogging Treadmill, Ends Up Arguing With Her Mom
not the actual photo

'AITAH for expecting a girl to get off a treadmill in the gym?'

The gym I go to doesn’t have a lot of treadmills and I’ve recently started running.

I went to the gym with my partner last night and all of the treadmills were in use.

I used some weight machines to start then went back to the treadmills.

I noticed there was a girl just sat on the treadmill while her friend was using the treadmill next to her.

She’d been there for at least 15 mins not using it so I went up and asked if she was planning to use it.

She said she was with her friend but I just said she can wit next to her friends machine

instead of taking up machines from people who want to use them,

She shrugged her shoulders and refused to move.

A women comes over and asks what’s happening so I explain it.

She said she’s the girls mother and that I shouldn’t be telling her daughter to move.

I just said her daughter shouldn’t be taking up machines she has no intention of using.

She said her daughter is feeling to sit there if she wants and that she’s doing nothing wrong.

I just said I can see where her daughter gets her entitlement from.

She said I was out of order for commenting on her parent but I just said she should be a better parent if she can’t handle any criticism.

A member of staff came over and when I explained why was going on, asked the daughter to move off the treadmill or leave the gym.

My gf said maybe I shouldn’t have argued with the mother but I don’t see how I’ve done anything wrong.

AITAH for asking a girl to get off a treadmill in the gym then arguing with her mother?

Few things trigger irritation faster than feeling shut out of something you’re ready to use. In shared spaces like gyms, people operate on an unspoken understanding that access should rotate fairly. When that expectation feels violated, frustration can rise quickly.

In this situation, the conflict began with a practical issue. Treadmills were limited. One was being occupied but not actively used. From his perspective, it seemed inefficient and unfair. Gym etiquette guidelines from organizations like the YMCA emphasize being mindful of others waiting for equipment and avoiding occupying machines unnecessarily.

While not always formal policy, shared-use norms rely heavily on cooperation and consideration. His initial request, asking whether she planned to use it, falls within reasonable boundaries of shared resource negotiation.

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However, the psychological dynamic shifted once refusal entered the picture. Humans are wired with what researchers call “inequity aversion,” a natural resistance to perceived unfairness.

When someone appears to benefit from a resource without using it while others wait, the emotional reaction can feel disproportionate because fairness norms are deeply embedded. That instinct likely fueled his persistence.

The escalation occurred when identity became involved. Academic research on psychological entitlement defines it as a belief that one deserves special treatment or privileges without necessarily earning them.

When he labeled the daughter entitled and criticized the mother’s parenting, the disagreement transformed from a behavioral correction into a character judgment. Once ego and status are activated, defensiveness increases. The conversation becomes less about treadmills and more about pride.

Interestingly, staff ultimately sided with him, reinforcing that occupying equipment without using it violated gym expectations. That validation suggests his underlying point about fairness was not unreasonable.

Yet research on conflict resolution consistently shows that delivery influences outcome. When people feel publicly challenged or shamed, they respond protectively rather than cooperatively.

The core question may not be whether he was technically right. It may be whether pushing the argument past the practical request added value. In shared environments, asserting fairness is valid. Preserving composure often determines whether the interaction remains about policy or becomes about personal attack.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These Reddit users stressed gym equipment is for workouts, not lounging

Mesapholis − A member of staff came over and when I explained why was going on, asked the daughter to move off the treadmill or leave the gym.

Totally right way to handle it, this is a gym not a social hangout for kids with no parenting NTA

SigSauerPower320 − NTA Not a single piece of equipment in a gym is mean to be used as a chair.

If you're not using the machine, you shouldn't be on it.

FishermanGeneral7224 − NTA, you either use the equipment or get out of the way for someone who wants too

Coffee4Redhead − NTA - that’s just annoying and she could sit somewhere else.

ChocolateandLipstick − NTA I go to the gym with my son whom is on the spectrum.

Sometimes it’s busy and sometimes it’s not. Sometimes he goes the full hour we are there, sometimes he loses steam half way.

If it gets busy, he moves out of the way or goes to a machine with less people around to ensure others can use.

We have this discussion regularly about respecting others at the gym. Both her and her daughter are disrespectful of gym etiquette.

These commenters said the mom and daughter acted entitled and rude

No_Control8031 − NTA. It was a polite request that escalated due to the other person’s unjustified sense of entitlement.

Ok-Organization-544 − NTA, coming from another teenage girl u had every right to tell her to move. The mother is entitled and so is the girl lmao

stevie_92b − Clearly NTA. Both of them are entitled a**holes

and if they couldn't understand your request and logic then they two shouldn't be allowed in the gym.

Good on you OP for standing your ground. Good on the employee for the backup. What's wrong with people

AssignmentNo2344 − NTA, I imagine that had to be super frustrating for you.

And you were completely right to speak to the mother and by the way she is the one who handled this poorly not you. Well done!

DynkoFromTheNorth − Every comment you made was justified.

NTA. The girl shouldn't have been on that machine in the first place. Let alone in the gym.

These folks agreed OP was right but suggested involving staff sooner

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OniyaMCD − NTA - but next time you might consider just notifying an attendant first.

HereWeGo_Steelers − You're NTA for expecting her to move, but the better way to approach this would have been to ask a staff member

to deal with the woman rather than confronting her yourself.

Edit to add: He should have gotten a staff member

when the woman and her daughter refused to move rather than continue to engage with them.

No-Jellyfish-1208 − NTA She was entitled and you're right, clear to see where she's got that entitlement from.

This said, next time you might want to just ask the staff to talk to them rather than involving yourself in a discussion like this.

It'll spare you the stress.

A_little_more_left − NTA next time inform the staff. Edit: I meant inform the staff after you've asked someone to move.

I thought that part was implied as going to the staff before asking someone if they'd please move makes no sense to me whatsoever.

This commenter mocked treating the gym like a café hangout

shortypam − NTA - she can stand next to her friend on the treadmill? It’s a gym, not a Starbucks.

Was he right to confront them directly, or should he have stepped back sooner? In a crowded gym, does politeness trump principle or vice versa?

If you saw someone parked on equipment they weren’t using, would you speak up… or scroll your phone and wait?

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