Child Gets Completely Excluded From Family Trips After Her Excessive Food Demands Frustrate Aunt
Being an aunt or an uncle is great – you get to spend time with the little ones, but not necessarily 24/7. However, only having them for brief periods of time often, too, comes with a set of challenges.
For this redditor, it was the tantrums of her brother’s stepdaughter that made spending time with her difficult. To make matters worse, the situation made the girl’s mother throw a tantrum of her own, leaving her husband—the OP’s brother—in the middle of all the mess. Scroll down to find the full story below.
Being an aunt or an uncle is often a very fun role to have
Image credits: EyeEm / Freepik (not the actual photo)
This aunt, however, found it difficult to spend time with her brother’s child
Image credits: NomadSoul1 / Envato Elements (not the actual photo)
Image credits: puhimec / Envato Elements (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Standard-Upstairs563
Image credits: Polina Kuzovkova / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
Aunts and uncles tend to play an important role in children’s lives
Being an aunt or an uncle is a unique role – you love your sibling’s child with all your heart, but you are also happy to bring them home to their parents once aunty/uncle-nephew/niece time is over. You are also happy to see them during holidays or get togethers, but relieved at the same time, that you don’t have to care for the little hell raiser 24/7.
Talking about the role a parent’s sibling plays, Robert M. Milardo, author of the book The Forgotten Kin: Aunts and Uncles, noted that “Aunts and uncles complement the work of parents, sometimes act as second parents, and sometimes form entirely unique brands of intimacy grounded in a lifetime of shared experiences.” But whether it’s complementing the parents’ work or developing an entirely separate relationship, a child having an aunt or an uncle that cares for them ought to be a positive influence in their lives.
One way for aunts and uncles to be a positive influence in the child’s life is being there for their nieces and nephews. As the parent’s sibling, they get a second row ticket to watch the little one go through different stages of their lives. And while that mostly means going “awww” whenever the kid does anything as a baby, later in life it might entail more than that – the child might need advice or a helping hand from an adult that is not their parent.
Image credits: Brooke Cagle / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
It’s important to spend time with your nieces and nephews if you want to form a close relationship
Writing for the HuffPost, licensed psychotherapist and family therapist, author of Parenting With Presence, Susan Stiffelman emphasized that when the going gets tough, youngsters often need the counsel of wise adults, and there are a few things people can do to become that trusted confidante to their nieces and nephews.
Firstly, you should spend some time trying to get to know your nieces and nephews. “Even if they seem busy, most kids (heck, most adults!) find it enormously flattering when someone shows interest in getting to know them better,” Stiffelman wrote.
Secondly, make sure to stay in touch, whether it’s Facebook, phones, or email that you use to do that. “Let your nieces and nephews know that you’re thinking of them. It can make a world of difference to a youngster to know that a beloved aunt or uncle cares enough to send a ‘Hi, how ya doing?’ text message,” the expert noted. “You’ll never know if your thoughts of kindness might arrive just as they’re dealing with something difficult.”
Last but not least, offer the youngster help with school work, if you have expertise in the area they might need help with. “Let them know you’d love to give them a hand. Better yet, combine an afternoon of tutoring with a meal that the two of you cook up together and you will have created a memorable experience that will nourish them physically, emotionally, and intellectually,” Stiffelman suggested.
One thing that connects all of the above is trustworthiness, which, according to the expert, is a key element in forming close aunt/uncle-nephew/niece relationships. But it’s evident that what such a relationship can’t do without is effort, time, and attention, all of which the OP would try to give to all of her siblings’ children on their get-togethers. However, spending time with her brother’s daughter has become too difficult—and wasteful—to continue, which is why the redditor put an end to their outings. Most netizens didn’t think that made her a jerk, in this situation.
Most netizens didn’t think the woman was in the wrong here
One person suggested the woman should change things up a little
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
Highlighting is irritating. Is this a new BP trend we are going to have to push back on (along with AI, celeb bs, etc)?
Right! I am not sure if they have cherry-picked one-liners to stir outrage, or they just think our comprehension is so p**s poor that we need help to understand reddit. Either way... not cool.
Load More Replies...Just insist one of her parents come along. They can deal with discipline and food intake until she can behave.
With how sil is already acting... She's gonna say something along the lines of no it's your day with her you discipline her. No not like that.
Load More Replies...It's not "treating her differently" to say no, I doubt she would buy this amount of food for her own kids. This Child needs therapy, either behavioral or food-related. I don't eat this much in a day.
I believe there must be a mental issue hidden in there somewhere. This child is a hoarder in the making. Or she's doing it to feel important because she doesn't feel important. New baby? Or she's craving all these things but doesn't understand portion control. Parent's fault. In any case, this needs investigating, not just reaction.
Load More Replies...How about this? No more outings with brother’s kid/stepkid? Problem solved. They are the ones who ruined it for their kids, by not reining in the stepkid’s behavior, and the stepkid ruined it for herself and everyone else by being a little b***h. Were her parents divorced, or is her dad deceased? The circumstances surrounding the marriage ending really do make a difference. A living father can manipulate their child into behaving badly. A deceased father can make a child act out because of grief. So the context of the father’s absence matters in cases like these.
The fück? I couldn’t eat all that, let alone paying for most of that to likely go in the bin… nah. I like the Redditor’s idea of making her sit there until she does eat it all, but then again, having a life is cool too…
Or take it home n pop in fridge n she eats nothing else till it’s all gone , little brat needs teaching respect n manners dont she
Load More Replies...Wait...there's a 50 piece mcnugget option? This I did not know (Dr Zoidberg voice)
There's a 40 piece option and a 10 piece option so maybe stacking it?
Load More Replies...Personally, I wouldn't take the kid on outings anymore either. I've had kids try to take advantage of me while the parent just laughed and said "isn't that cute?" That's when I'm done.
That kid needs some hard boundaries. Since she doesn't want to behave, then she shouldn't be invited til she can prove differently.
This is why "it takes a village" is dying. Understandably, no one wants to deal with other people's problems. Because she is a problem, and her parents aren't fixing it, so why should an aunt take over
IF I wanted to put up with Little Miss Tantrum, I'd tell bro + SIL to give me $100 CASH to pay for the kid's food.
😂😂 That would cause the problem to get parental attention quickly!
Load More Replies...This girl is laughing meanly because she thinks she's so smart. In about ten years the poor thing is going to come face-to-face with reality and get the shock of her life.
Not so sure about that. I have worked with a lot of (supposedly) grown up people who act exactly the same way.
Load More Replies...Parents need to urgently get their child medically assessed. Apart from mental health disorders there's also Prader-Willi syndrome which includes severe over eating. That child is is eating entire FAMILY portions. She's heading for extreme dangerous health and in her immediate behaviour too.
If this one child stands out amongst all the relatives then it seems likely to me that there may well be an underlying cause behind her behaviour. I'm speaking as someone who has watched their children and their friends grow up, and see where they are now. We live in a society **so** anxious to get to 'naughty child! punish it! this is what happens when you are too indulgent!' that people don't want to accept that a child continually acting out has stuff going on inside that they can't manage on their own.
Is the kid taking the leftovers home? If so I wonder if there's enough for her to eat there, or maybe her parents don't buy her junk food so she wants enough to take with her for later. If she's just wasting it it's just stupid. Either way her behaviour is unacceptable. If the food goes home I'd mention it to her parents to talk about why, but generally I wouldn't invite her either.
I'm wondering how old that kid is. I absolutely wouldn't be taking her anywhere with behavior like that. You don't like being told no about not getting a toy. Get your butt in the car! You want to order tons of food and don't like being told no, fine cancel order and leave without anything until you learn how to behave!
If one child can eat that amount??? Seriously, it would take me a week or more to eat that!
And no one is noticing that this is the kind of issue that crops up when a child feels food insecure in their own home???? If I were in this woman's shoes, I'd be calling CPS on my brother and his wife. Why is this kid constantly asking for more food than she can possibly eat? I've done foster care - no matter how well off the family, no matter how nice the parents seem, you have no idea what's going on behind closed doors.
Huge red flags of eating disorders blossoming bigger by the day. They appear to be attached to fundamental emotional problems -- tantrums, etc. -- that need to be addressed by her parents and a therapist, not by you. You are not a therapist, but you don't want to be her enabler, either. If she were cutting herself would her parents react the same way? They're in denial, but the child is not, and the child is helpless. The food is a distraction from her deeper problems. I hope you can do something to really help her because a long ugly road lies ahead if you (or more precisely, her parents) don't intervene.
CONTACT Mr Lucas Henry call (+2348161676526 or WhatsApp him through this number +2348161676526 or Email: illuminatiworldofsociety1@gmail.com Hello everyone my name is Andrew Ronald am from USA I am here to give a testimony on how I joined the illuminati brotherhood, I was trying to join this organization for so many years now,I was scammed by fake agent in Kenya and Nigeria,I was down,I could not feed my self and my family anymore and I tried to make money by all miss but all invail, I was afraid to contact any illuminati agent because they have eat my money,One day I across a post of someone giving a testimony, thanking a man called Lucas Henry of being helping him to join the illuminati brotherhood, then I look at the man email and the phone number that was written there, it was a nigeria number I was afraid to contact him because a nigerian agent eat my $3000 and go away with the money then I was very tired, confused and I decided to contact the person that was given the testimony.,
Ask for all she wants no problem, 100 chicken breasts if she wants. Whatever is left un-eaten, take a photo, charge the parents for the un-eaten food.
I do not remember ever ordering food as a child. My parents did that. And as a parent I did the ordering. I was paying, after all. I would ask, but parental limits on sugar, sweets, and volume would seem normal.
McD doesn't HAVE a fifty nugget item on menu. Can you say "outrage bait"? I knew you could.
You can order 50 without the exact quantity being on the menu. She's demanding 50 which you could do with a 40 and a 10 or 5 10 pieces.
Load More Replies...Maybe the SIL should try parenting her child so she's not an unbearable POS.
there are so many issues here, but what I don't understand is why is OP letting the kid order for herself? Let her know from the start "you get what you get and don't get upset". If she orders too much tell her "no" and order for her. If she has a tantrum, she can eat it or do without. Get control of the situation....
As an adult I cant eat that much. Honestly a happy meal is big enough for me
Did I miss something or is she allowing a 1 year old to order a 50 piece nugget?!?
Yes, you missed something (it happens to me on a regular basis). The 8-year old ordered a 50-piece nugget (according to OP).
Load More Replies...Highlighting is irritating. Is this a new BP trend we are going to have to push back on (along with AI, celeb bs, etc)?
Right! I am not sure if they have cherry-picked one-liners to stir outrage, or they just think our comprehension is so p**s poor that we need help to understand reddit. Either way... not cool.
Load More Replies...Just insist one of her parents come along. They can deal with discipline and food intake until she can behave.
With how sil is already acting... She's gonna say something along the lines of no it's your day with her you discipline her. No not like that.
Load More Replies...It's not "treating her differently" to say no, I doubt she would buy this amount of food for her own kids. This Child needs therapy, either behavioral or food-related. I don't eat this much in a day.
I believe there must be a mental issue hidden in there somewhere. This child is a hoarder in the making. Or she's doing it to feel important because she doesn't feel important. New baby? Or she's craving all these things but doesn't understand portion control. Parent's fault. In any case, this needs investigating, not just reaction.
Load More Replies...How about this? No more outings with brother’s kid/stepkid? Problem solved. They are the ones who ruined it for their kids, by not reining in the stepkid’s behavior, and the stepkid ruined it for herself and everyone else by being a little b***h. Were her parents divorced, or is her dad deceased? The circumstances surrounding the marriage ending really do make a difference. A living father can manipulate their child into behaving badly. A deceased father can make a child act out because of grief. So the context of the father’s absence matters in cases like these.
The fück? I couldn’t eat all that, let alone paying for most of that to likely go in the bin… nah. I like the Redditor’s idea of making her sit there until she does eat it all, but then again, having a life is cool too…
Or take it home n pop in fridge n she eats nothing else till it’s all gone , little brat needs teaching respect n manners dont she
Load More Replies...Wait...there's a 50 piece mcnugget option? This I did not know (Dr Zoidberg voice)
There's a 40 piece option and a 10 piece option so maybe stacking it?
Load More Replies...Personally, I wouldn't take the kid on outings anymore either. I've had kids try to take advantage of me while the parent just laughed and said "isn't that cute?" That's when I'm done.
That kid needs some hard boundaries. Since she doesn't want to behave, then she shouldn't be invited til she can prove differently.
This is why "it takes a village" is dying. Understandably, no one wants to deal with other people's problems. Because she is a problem, and her parents aren't fixing it, so why should an aunt take over
IF I wanted to put up with Little Miss Tantrum, I'd tell bro + SIL to give me $100 CASH to pay for the kid's food.
😂😂 That would cause the problem to get parental attention quickly!
Load More Replies...This girl is laughing meanly because she thinks she's so smart. In about ten years the poor thing is going to come face-to-face with reality and get the shock of her life.
Not so sure about that. I have worked with a lot of (supposedly) grown up people who act exactly the same way.
Load More Replies...Parents need to urgently get their child medically assessed. Apart from mental health disorders there's also Prader-Willi syndrome which includes severe over eating. That child is is eating entire FAMILY portions. She's heading for extreme dangerous health and in her immediate behaviour too.
If this one child stands out amongst all the relatives then it seems likely to me that there may well be an underlying cause behind her behaviour. I'm speaking as someone who has watched their children and their friends grow up, and see where they are now. We live in a society **so** anxious to get to 'naughty child! punish it! this is what happens when you are too indulgent!' that people don't want to accept that a child continually acting out has stuff going on inside that they can't manage on their own.
Is the kid taking the leftovers home? If so I wonder if there's enough for her to eat there, or maybe her parents don't buy her junk food so she wants enough to take with her for later. If she's just wasting it it's just stupid. Either way her behaviour is unacceptable. If the food goes home I'd mention it to her parents to talk about why, but generally I wouldn't invite her either.
I'm wondering how old that kid is. I absolutely wouldn't be taking her anywhere with behavior like that. You don't like being told no about not getting a toy. Get your butt in the car! You want to order tons of food and don't like being told no, fine cancel order and leave without anything until you learn how to behave!
If one child can eat that amount??? Seriously, it would take me a week or more to eat that!
And no one is noticing that this is the kind of issue that crops up when a child feels food insecure in their own home???? If I were in this woman's shoes, I'd be calling CPS on my brother and his wife. Why is this kid constantly asking for more food than she can possibly eat? I've done foster care - no matter how well off the family, no matter how nice the parents seem, you have no idea what's going on behind closed doors.
Huge red flags of eating disorders blossoming bigger by the day. They appear to be attached to fundamental emotional problems -- tantrums, etc. -- that need to be addressed by her parents and a therapist, not by you. You are not a therapist, but you don't want to be her enabler, either. If she were cutting herself would her parents react the same way? They're in denial, but the child is not, and the child is helpless. The food is a distraction from her deeper problems. I hope you can do something to really help her because a long ugly road lies ahead if you (or more precisely, her parents) don't intervene.
CONTACT Mr Lucas Henry call (+2348161676526 or WhatsApp him through this number +2348161676526 or Email: illuminatiworldofsociety1@gmail.com Hello everyone my name is Andrew Ronald am from USA I am here to give a testimony on how I joined the illuminati brotherhood, I was trying to join this organization for so many years now,I was scammed by fake agent in Kenya and Nigeria,I was down,I could not feed my self and my family anymore and I tried to make money by all miss but all invail, I was afraid to contact any illuminati agent because they have eat my money,One day I across a post of someone giving a testimony, thanking a man called Lucas Henry of being helping him to join the illuminati brotherhood, then I look at the man email and the phone number that was written there, it was a nigeria number I was afraid to contact him because a nigerian agent eat my $3000 and go away with the money then I was very tired, confused and I decided to contact the person that was given the testimony.,
Ask for all she wants no problem, 100 chicken breasts if she wants. Whatever is left un-eaten, take a photo, charge the parents for the un-eaten food.
I do not remember ever ordering food as a child. My parents did that. And as a parent I did the ordering. I was paying, after all. I would ask, but parental limits on sugar, sweets, and volume would seem normal.
McD doesn't HAVE a fifty nugget item on menu. Can you say "outrage bait"? I knew you could.
You can order 50 without the exact quantity being on the menu. She's demanding 50 which you could do with a 40 and a 10 or 5 10 pieces.
Load More Replies...Maybe the SIL should try parenting her child so she's not an unbearable POS.
there are so many issues here, but what I don't understand is why is OP letting the kid order for herself? Let her know from the start "you get what you get and don't get upset". If she orders too much tell her "no" and order for her. If she has a tantrum, she can eat it or do without. Get control of the situation....
As an adult I cant eat that much. Honestly a happy meal is big enough for me
Did I miss something or is she allowing a 1 year old to order a 50 piece nugget?!?
Yes, you missed something (it happens to me on a regular basis). The 8-year old ordered a 50-piece nugget (according to OP).
Load More Replies...































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