After 20 Years of Feeding My Sister’s Family, I Finally Cut the Buffet

How long would you keep cooking massive holiday feasts for relatives who show up unannounced and treat your home like a free buffet? One host finally drew the line after decades of being taken for granted by a mooching sister and her crew.

The setup seemed ideal at first with family nearby for gatherings. Repeated entitlement turned generosity into resentment, culminating in a dessert-only policy that delivered sweet justice without a single main dish.

‘After 20 Years of Feeding My Sister’s Family, I Finally Cut the Buffet’

The tradition began with generous hosting that grew out of control over the years.

For over 20 years I have hosted holidays at my place. My sister and her family moved out of state, but are close enough to come back for each holiday....

Sister and her family always go to her in-laws place for the big meal, and since her MIL is not a great cook they just pick at the food then...

Now you're probably thinking what's the big deal, right? Well the big deal is that it's gotten to the point my recipe for mashed potatoes starts with a 10 pound...

and I use an entire quart of cream for just desserts. It's a huge undertaking and not only does sister not contribute financially, she never even has the decency to...

A clear boundary was set this year through a group message.

This year I texted the family that my kids were going to make the meal for just us and if anyone wanted to join us afterwards I'd have dessert and...

As usual I got a text from everyone else but nothing from sister. Rather than trying to chase her down, I "assumed" she had gotten the message and went on...

The intimate family meal proceeded smoothly until the unexpected arrival.

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The times comes and the kids put on a lovely meal. We eat and enjoy ourselves then pack up the leftovers. A few family showed up over the next hour...

Sister's family has arrived. They invade in usual style going round giving quick hugs before heading for the kitchen. It took less than 30 seconds before she's out (trying to...

The confrontation unfolded in front of gathered relatives.

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Me: aren't the pies on the counter? The bread pudding is in the crockpot, the sauce is on the stove.. Her: yes, but where's the food?. At this point the...

Her: you know we can't actually eat at MILs house. We were counting on eating here before we drive back.. Me: well I think there should be fast food open...

Her adult kids were trickling out of the kitchen at this point looking around as if a turkey dinner is going to magically appear out of thin air and everyone...

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She spewed some not nice comments about how they were probably not going to find anything open and it was my fault they were going hungry, told "the kids" to...

Laughter broke the tension as the evening continued pleasantly.

I don't know who lost their composure first, but I think it was my uncle who cracked and started laughing. Once we calmed back down the rest of us had...

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The disagreement stemmed from unbalanced holiday contributions where one sibling hosted elaborate meals without reciprocation or communication. The sister expected full access to food after minimal effort elsewhere, impacting the host’s time and resources. Emotions ran high due to ingrained patterns clashing with a new boundary.

The host felt exploited after years of unchecked mooching, driven by a desire for fairness. The sister operated on entitlement, assuming availability without confirmation. Insecurities about family harmony delayed pushback. Lack of direct dialogue allowed assumptions to build resentment on both sides.

Family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner states in The Dance of Connection that “Clear boundaries and direct communication prevent resentment from poisoning relationships” (2001). This case shows how unaddressed expectations created a cycle of taking, finally broken by explicit limits that forced accountability.

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Start future holidays with a shared planning call weeks ahead, assigning dishes or costs. Use phrases like “We need confirmation by this date to prepare.” If patterns repeat, host potluck-style only. Follow up ignored messages privately to clarify without public drama. These steps rebuild equity through openness.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

The social media thread buzzed with amusement and support for the dessert-only twist. Users shared witty ideas and called out the sister’s behavior in this family feast fiasco.

A wave of approval hit for standing firm against years of freeloading. Commenters celebrated the boundary enforcement.

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baka-tari − Aw hell, you could have at least baked 4 and 20 blackbirds into a pie so she could eat crow. Good for you, not feeding her entitlement. Or...

TrebledHeart − If she's gonna treat you like a food stop before heading home, maybe you should start meeting her at the door and asking for payment before she gets...

Mulewrangler − Wow, just a little entitled. I'm glad that you finally stuck up for yourself. Do it again at xmas. Tell her "I'm sorry. I should have done this...

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You're just going to have to eat at her house. Or, why don't you cook? We'll see you for dessert at xmas. Oh, what are you going to bring so...

Personally, two years would have been the end of that for me. And her Just send the same email at xmas. And if she says something tell her it's dessert...

Several questioned the sister’s logic and manners in detail. They suggested family-wide changes.

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Own_Breakfast_570 − It begs the question if your sister knew her mother-in-law's cooking was s__tty and they don't eat the food there why didn't she stay her ass at home...

Sounds like it might be time for everyone in the family to start putting the kibosh on her coming over for holidays and trying to score free food from you...

DiscombobulatedTill − I absolutely can not imagine showing up to someone,s home empty handed, not help cook and clean as we go, and not help clean up after. Who does...

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CandylandCanada − It's a family comprised of all adults. They have opposable thumbs, they can operate vehicles, so they can scrounge for their own food. Perhaps next time sister, or...

Practical tips and humorous quips rounded out the reactions. These added future strategies.

Excellent_Ad1132 − For Christmas do the same but make what will feed your family and maybe a few left overs for the next couple of days, but put all the...

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CoderJoe1 − Always nice to have a family meal after the turkeys fly the coop

iloveducks101 − This should be your new tradition

Which_Reason_1581 − Now it's time to crack out the "hidden leftovers". Lol.

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Usual-Archer-916 − Waffle House is open on Thanksgiving.

Limp-Win381 − Are all her children adults? So when she complained that "the kids would go hungry" she was referring to adults? ??

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Wtf OP hope your sis and her cheap, mooching family got the message. Honestly, if they are going to just "push food around their plates" they might as well eat...

Whole-Ad-2347 − Now that she got the message, she might be in a different place next year for how it will work.

JPNtheHUN − A bit spoiled?

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Gogogrl − ‘Enjoying just desserts’. Chef’s kiss.

Boundary-setting in family traditions can restore balance and end exploitation. The host reclaimed control, turning obligation into enjoyment while the moochers faced reality. It proves that clear communication upfront prevents holiday headaches and promotes mutual respect.

Would you enforce a dessert-only rule after similar treatment? How early should families confirm plans to avoid these blowups?

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