Pregnant Woman’s Controlling Father Won’t Let Her Choose …
The Original Post
I(28F) am pregnant and my husband (31M) and I live in our own house right next to my parents. To help us save money, my parents often buy groceries and cook dinners for all four of us, which I appreciate.
The problem is my dad is extremely controlling and picky about food. He only likes a few very basic meals (like plain chicken and rice, pork chops with a ton of butter, canned vegetables, etc). When he finds something he likes, he will make it multiple times a week, so we eat the same four or five meals on rotation constantly. If I suggest something different (like not having green beans 3 days in a row), he shuts it down with ânah, nah, nah, itâs better this way.â He also complains or claims food makes him sick if it isnât done exactly how he wants, unless he doesnât know whatâs in it, then suddenly itâs âthe best thing ever.â (He claims chicken âbroffâ upsets his stomach when i use it to cook pasta, but if i use it without him knowing its the best pasta he has ever had)
I have had strong food aversions with my pregnancy and about five of the six meals he makes now make me gag. When I turn something down, he says things like âyou used to like itâ or âyou have ate it that way for 30 yearsâbut I never actually liked it, I just ate it because it was what my parents made me as a kid.
My mom asks me to help plan dinners for the week, but when I suggest things I can tolerate, my dad says itâs too complicated, too expensive, or that he doesnât know how to get the ingredients. I even offer to cook it if he buys the ingredients and i write him a specific list. But we go back to his tiny list of meals because its âtoo complicatedâ.
We all 4 take turns cooking at our own houses, but no matter who cooks, my dad complains all night about the food if it isnât like plain unseasoned chicken.
When I was a kid, when we went out to a fast food place and I wanted a chicken sandwich, he would insist we all get burgers because it was âeasierâ and even chose everyoneâs toppings without letting me pick mine differently. He would order 3 identical burgers and id just have to eat it.
My mom gets defensive when I turn down options they give me, and is like âweâre tryingâ. But itâs not like I am asking them to make lobster and steak dinners every night. For example, we plan on making chicken pie this weekend and I asked dad if we could cook the chicken on the George Forman grill and season it before and he adamantly was like âNO. Chicken pie has BOILED chicken.â I can see how I would be the AH if I was asking for expensive crazy meals, but iâm not. I am just asking or making suggestions to season or make the foods better.
Edit to add:
There was some confusion. We eat with them because they offered and it makes my mom happy. We do not need to eat with them nor do we rely on them for our meals. We are capable of making our own meals and paying for our own groceries. I do not expect my parents to feed us and I appreciate the offer and meals they do make for us. In fact, my husband and I cook for all 4 of us twice a week. My post is more explaining they want us over but get upset when we decide otherwise due to my food aversions. Mom phrased it as âsaving money for the babyâ but really it was a bid for attention to spend more time together.
What Reddit Said
Reddit immediately rallied behind OP with a resounding NTA verdict. Most commenters focused on the father’s controlling behavior pattern that clearly extends far beyond just meal planning. However, many users questioned why OP continues subjecting herself to this treatment.
The top comment received over 6,000 upvotes for bluntly telling OP to stop eating with her parents entirely. Redditors pointed out that the parents will complain regardless of what OP does. Moreover, many expressed concern about OP potentially exposing her future child to the same controlling food dynamics she experienced growing up.
The Verdict
The overwhelming consensus: OP is Not the Asshole (NTA). This pregnant woman controlling father food situation represents a classic case of family drama rooted in long-term control issues. Reddit’s advice was clear: establish boundaries now before the baby arrives, because this controlling behavior will likely extend to grandparenting decisions as well.
Original post from r/AmItheAsshole (2,844 upvotes, 813 comments)