AITA for confronting an older man who repeatedly mocked me for the way that I study at a coffee shop?

A young woman studying for her graduate healthcare program regularly uses a local coffee shop as a quiet workspace. She sets up with her laptop for lectures and iPad for notes—a common sight in the laptop-friendly café. However, an older regular in his late 60s has repeatedly interrupted her to mock her for using “two computers,” despite her polite explanations.

After enduring the comments three times, she directly but calmly asked him to stop, explaining the importance of her studies. The man accused her of being overly sensitive and rude, leaving her questioning if she overreacted by finally confronting him.

‘AITA for confronting an older man who repeatedly mocked me for the way that I study at a coffee shop?’

A graduate student studies efficiently at a welcoming coffee shop using her laptop and iPad.

I am a semi-regular (I go a few times a week) customer at a coffee shop, where I enjoy going to study for a couple hours while enjoying a pastry...

The cafe is well-known to be laptop-friendly, and many of the “regulars” stay to work on their laptops much longer than me and the owner is very welcoming to us.

Whenever I go, I am polite to everyone, spend about $10, tip the baristas, clean up after myself, and take up less space than the average man.

When I study, I use my iPad to take notes while I watch lectures on my laptop. The laptop is either on the table or on my lap while I...

There’s this older man (let’s call him “John”) who appears to be in his late 60s, and goes to the coffee shop to sit and read the newspaper for hours...

On multiple visits, John interrupts her to mock her dual-device setup.

On several occasions he’s mocked me about using 2 devices while I study. The first time, he looked at me with my laptop and iPad laughed, saying “I think it’s...

Why do you need TWO computers?!”. I smiled politely and explained to him that I am in graduate school watching lectures and this is how I study since some of...

ADVERTISEMENT

He said “well, I miss the good old days, when people weren’t all addicted to technology” and I was like “yea, I can understand that” then went back to studying,

and gave him the benefit of the doubt, thinking he was a bored lonely older man who felt nostalgic about his youth.

The second time, John saw me and interrupted my studying again to say “oh hey it’s you again, I just find it so comical that you feel the need to...

ADVERTISEMENT

I just smiled and responded, “Gotta do what you gotta do!” then went back to studying. By this time, I was feeling somewhat irritated and disrespected.

On the third occasion, she confronts John and asks him to stop.

The third time, I lost my patience for John mocking me. He interrupted me once again while I was watching a lecture to make fun of me with my “two...

ADVERTISEMENT

John, I’m getting the sense that the way I study upsets you for some reason, is there a reason why it bothers you? He looked taken aback and started fumbling...

I said “John, I understand that you may be retired, but I’m in the beginning of my career and I need to study. As I already explained, some of my...

I am in the process of becoming a healthcare professional to save people’s lives, so I take my academics very seriously. I would really appreciate it if you could please...

ADVERTISEMENT

He looked extremely surprised at my response and made some comment about how sensitive everyone in my generation is and how I was overreacting over a joke and being rude...

If he’d just said it once I would have let it go, but it was the repeated harassment that really started to bother me. Am I the a__hole for confronting...

Public spaces like coffee shops often host a mix of patrons, and unspoken etiquette usually discourages repeated unsolicited comments toward strangers. The student handled the first two incidents with grace, offering explanations and defusing tension, which shows considerable restraint. What turns this into harassment is the repetition despite clear signals that the remarks were unwelcome.

ADVERTISEMENT

John’s nostalgia for pre-digital eras doesn’t justify interrupting someone’s work, especially when his own activities involve a smartphone and newspaper—hardly tech-free. Dismissing her response as generational sensitivity shifts blame and ignores that boundaries apply regardless of age.

Broader societal patterns show older adults sometimes voicing discomfort with technology by critiquing younger users, yet polite pushback asserts mutual respect. Her calm, factual confrontation modeled assertiveness without aggression, reinforcing that everyone deserves uninterrupted focus in shared spaces. Ignoring it further might have encouraged escalation, while speaking up protects personal space and models healthy boundary-setting.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most users declared the student firmly not the asshole, praising her patience and final response.

ADVERTISEMENT

allyrbas3 − - John teases you about something that doesn't affect him in the slightest - You give a polite reply, including an explanation - He does it again -...

You tell him that his comments are bothering you and you have work to do in a direct, non-confrontational way - John gets offended - Somehow YOU'RE the sensitive one?...

NYCStoryteller − NTA. John needs to find a better conversation starter than mocking people for their use of technology. If he was a curious sort, he'd ask about what you're...

ADVERTISEMENT

UncleNedisDead − NTA Next time John starts up. Pause and just stare at him. When he starts getting uncomfortable, ask him very slowly, “Is there a family member I can...

When he asks why, respond with, “We’ve had the same interaction multiple times and you don’t seem to remember. I suspect you may have dementia and need to be under...

exhaustedby1201 − NTA I think you were polite with your responses and the last one was definitely warranted. Keep doing your thing and John should learn to mind his own...

ADVERTISEMENT

Apprehensive_Mark_20 − You're not oversensitive, he wasn't joking, and you weren't rude. He was being judgmental, and you had had enough. He was trying to get a rise out of...

and he kept it up till you put him in its place. He's what happens when bullies grow up and get old. Try not to let it get to you,...

HungryEstablishment6 − Tomorrow John, I will have THREE computers.

ADVERTISEMENT

Several offered witty comebacks or practical advice for future encounters.

AnitaLatte − NTA. Sounds like this guy is about my age. I use my iPad mini all the time. It’s great for watching instructional videos, accessing my email, taking notes,...

My age group was there at the beginning when personal computers started popping up in offices and for home use. Many shied away and refused to learn about the new...

ADVERTISEMENT

Over the years they were left behind and it’s a scary place. John seems to be in this situation. He feels more comfortable making fun of the tech savvy than...

You explained yourself well. I would have been tempted to comment how cute it is to see older people still reading printed newspapers. Too bad they don’t make cell phones...

Healthy-Air3755 − Look at Tommy Two Tablets over here! NTA.

ADVERTISEMENT

A couple kept it light with humorous support.

cheltsie − NTA I am not sure I'd even call this a confrontation. It sounds like he never figured out how to get information without complaining, and you gave him...

ADVERTISEMENT

It was directly to the point, not rude nor overly polite, and should give him the perspective he needs. He might be missing a time where it was easy to...

I get that and am sad about it too. But I wholeheartedly agree three times is far too many times. He definitely stepped over polite boundaries himself. Maybe if you...

If the cafe gets its business by inviting folks with their laptops, they will want to know someone is actively discouraging their customers from returning.

ADVERTISEMENT

canvasshoes2 − NTA. And good for you for telling him off so clearly. Boomer here. (sort of, I was born during the cusp generation known as "Generation Jones" same as...

I hate, Hate, HAAAATE how some in my generation (just SOME mind you) view technology. Rest assured it's not all of us and there are a lot of us who...

I probably have at least as many tablets. I've also got a very up to date smart phone. Even my nearly 90 year old dad knows how to use his...

ADVERTISEMENT

The community overwhelmingly supported the student’s decision to confront the man after repeated unwanted comments, viewing her response as measured and justified. Many highlighted that his behavior crossed into harassment and that age doesn’t excuse rudeness.

Have you ever had to shut down a nosy or judgmental stranger in a public place? What’s your go-to polite-but-firm comeback for unwanted commentary? Share your experiences below.

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

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