AITA for making my dad and 13-year-old brother cook for themselves for the first time ever?

A young woman has cooked for her family since age 12, stepping in whenever her mom is tired or busy. Her 50-something dad has never cooked a meal in his life and often taunts or complains when his wife is exhausted. Her 13-year-old brother expects mom or sister to cook for him. When mom went out of town for 3 days, the poster decided to stop enabling the pattern: she refused to cook, leaving them with pre-cooked rice/quinoa and simple instructions—make omelettes and fried potatoes.

They managed to do it—no one starved, nothing burned—but the dad exploded, scolding her harshly and calling her “four times worse than mom.” The brother later apologized and promised to cook/help with chores. Mom sides with them, flexing how her brothers cook for their wives and believing women should handle cooking. The poster feels relieved but wonders if she was cruel. The online community was unanimous: NTA—she taught essential life skills and challenged harmful gender expectations.

‘AITA for making my dad and 13-year-old brother cook for themselves for the first time ever?’

The family dynamic has long placed cooking on women:

My dad is in his 50s and has never cooked a meal in his life. My mom does all the cooking, and when she gets angry because she is tired...

I’ve been cooking since I was 12, so when my mom doesn’t feel well or is busy, I usually step in. My brother is 13 and also expects either my...

My mom does sometimes tell them to cook, but she always gives in and ends up doing it herself, so nothing ever changes.

The decision came during mom’s absence:

Recently, my mom went out of town for 3 days. I decided I wasn’t going to enable this anymore. I made my dad and brother cook for themselves for the...

I didn’t leave them with nothing. Rice and quinoa were already cooked.

They only had to make:.

1. 2 omelettes.

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2. fried potatoes. So… very basic food.. They did manage to cook it. Nobody starved. Nothing got ruined.

But my dad absolutely lost it. He scolded me and said I was “four times worse than my mom”. He acted like I’d done something unforgivable.

Meanwhile, I actually feel relieved because for once I didn’t cover for their behavior or take on responsibility that shouldn’t be mine.. So… AITA for forcing them to cook instead...

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Update: My brother apologised and promised to make meals and help out with chores. And somehow even dad agreed to help out. Thank you all for your insights and I...

And my mom is on their side and believes that women should be the one to cook while flexing how her brothers cook for their wives. Toodles might get scolded...

Gendered household labor expectations—women cook, men don’t—create imbalance, burnout, and resentment, especially when passed to daughters. Here, the dad’s lifelong refusal to cook and taunting of his exhausted wife normalized the idea that domestic tasks are “women’s work.” The 13-year-old brother absorbing this sets him up for future relationship problems. The poster’s stand disrupted the pattern, forcing basic self-sufficiency.

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From the dad’s perspective, the change felt like an attack on his identity/role, leading to rage (“four times worse than mom”). But anger often masks discomfort with accountability. The brother’s apology and promise to help show the intervention worked—he learned responsibility.

Experts in family dynamics and gender equity stress: teaching life skills (cooking, chores) is essential for all genders. Refusing to enable learned helplessness isn’t cruelty—it’s parenting/mentoring. In cultural contexts where tradition is strong (e.g., Nepal), such stands can face backlash (scolding, guilt), but they break cycles. Practical advice: continue modeling equality; involve mom in reinforcing chores for brother; consider family discussion when calm. The poster’s relief is valid—she protected her own energy and taught independence.

See what others had to share with OP:

The community overwhelmingly supported the poster (NTA), praising her for breaking the cycle of gendered labor and teaching life skills, while condemning the dad’s entitlement and mom’s reinforcement of traditional roles.

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Many users expressed strong admiration for the poster’s stand, seeing it as heroic and necessary for equality:

Particular_Tailor971 − NTA Well done, your dad may never change, but your brother needs to learn equality, and simple task like, cook for himself, laundry, wipe his ass. Queen 👑

Addaran − NTA you're a hero. If your dad and brother can't cook for themselves, they can go buy some food or they need to be placed in daycare cause...

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thefuuuck − NTA. I'm sorry that's your home life experience, watching your dad treat your mom so poorly and raise his son to think women are there to take care...

ModGirlwithTea − You are absolutely NTA! Cooking is a life skill everyone should know how to do. It’s deplorable a 50 rear old would complain about having to cook his...

and he is also setting your brother up for learned helplessness. It’s pure laziness and entitlement on Dad’s part. Good for you and shame on him!

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Creative_Energy533 − NTA. You were '4x worse than your mom' because you followed through on your threat and made them cook some of their own food.

Your dad might be a lost cause, but keep on your brother (and have your mom keep on him too). Maybe make a big deal out of something he makes...

Ask him if he sees how frustrated your mom is because she's doing ALL OF THE CHORES and how that's NOT actually a good thing to make her do them...

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If he wants to have a partner one day, they will really appreciate that your brother would know how to cook and clean, like a responsible adult.

darkredpintobeans − Nta women don't exist to serve men, and they'd do well to learn this as well as how to cook.

Puzzleheaded_Barhead − Learning to cook at the age if 50 is never too late 🙂‍↔️. Glad you stood your ground.

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Several commenters sharply criticized the dad’s misogyny and the mom’s reinforcement of traditional roles:

pookie-senpai − NTA your dad is acting like a child

aseikh − Dad is 50 and never cooked a meal in his life? NTA.

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LifesABeach8888 − I am a firm believer that everyone should know how to cook at least one meal... The problem here is your father believes coming is women's work...

shebasmum49 − Your father is a chauvinist and is teaching your brother to be the same.

AstraeaMoonrise − NTA do you live in the Middle East or something? It’s not fair that you and your brother are being raised to expect women to do work like...

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rowenaravenclaw0 − NTA, cooking is a life skill and your brother needs how to do at least do the basics. Your dad might be a lost cause though

A few responses offered deeper insight about life skills, breaking cycles, and gender expectations:

Emergency_Cherry_914 − NTA This is on par with making kids do chores. Cooking is a life skill and even though your dad managed without, your brother needs to learn because...

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Refusing to perpetuate gendered labor expectations isn’t cruelty—it’s a powerful act of boundary-setting and teaching responsibility. The dad’s rage and mom’s defense of “women cook” reveal deep-seated beliefs, but the poster’s stand gave her brother a chance to learn independence. Relief is valid after years of carrying unfair load.

Have you ever refused to do “women’s work” in your family, or pushed back against similar expectations? How did it go? Share your stories below—challenging traditional roles can be hard, but many find freedom and growth on the other side.

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