AITAH for making a snarky comment after my boundaries were overlooked?

A 22-year-old woman and her girlfriend accepted an invitation to a family dinner hosted by the girlfriend’s best friend, Angela, who wanted support while meeting her boyfriend’s family. The evening started warmly, with good food and conversation, until Angela’s boyfriend’s younger brother, John, noticed her empty plate and insisted she take more rice — despite her repeatedly and politely saying no.

After five clear refusals, he poured the rice onto her plate anyway. Frustrated, she snapped with a sharp comment: “Do you not know the meaning of No? Do you need a dictionary?” The mood turned awkward, the family withdrew, and later they learned John is autistic. Now Angela’s boyfriend is furious, blaming her for not being kinder — but was her reaction really out of line?

‘AITAH for making a snarky comment after my boundaries were overlooked?’

The invitation was meant to be supportive:

Me (22F) & my girlfriend, "Lisa" (21F) were recently invited to a dinner by Lisa's bestfriend, "Angela" (21F). Angela has no family in this country and we are the only...

About 7 months ago she met a guy, "Steve" (33M) and they both quickly hit it off. Around march they started dating. This dinner was basically an event where Steve...

Angela had no company so she invited us. Lisa is familiar with Steve, met him multiple times, unlike me, I saw him once or twice, but we were happy to...

The evening started well:

Honestly, it was great, everyone had lots of fun chatting. I didn't speak much except when I was talked to. The family had mom, dad and a younger brother, "John"...

Then came the repeated offers:

The dinner was good too, I liked the food, I finished before everyone else so I was just sitting on my chair. John maybe noticed my empty plate, so he...

I found the gesture really sweet but since I was full, the conversation went something like this - "Hey, would you like some rice? I made it myself." "That's so...

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"I made it myself, please have some." "That's nice but I am really full, so, no but thank you." "I made it, taste it." "No, thank you." I don't know...

I lost it and made the "snarky" comment. "Do you not know the meaning of No? Do you need a dictionary?" to which he looked taken aback.

Lisa noticed I was a bit pissed and said, "please don't force her to have more food." She said so because I have had trouble in past with food, like...

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The aftermath was swift:

Before things could escalate, Steve took John into his room and they both never returned. The room was filled with awkwardness and after 5 minutes his mom left too. So...

Angela didn't look angry with us but she looked disappointed and I felt bad, so we apologised to her for messing up the dinner. Regardless, she agreed with us that...

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Then came the confrontation:

Yesterday morning, Angela showed up at our home, telling us that his boyfriend got mad at her, yelled at her for how we treated John. Turns out, John is autistic...

Steve mostly blamed me for not treating his brother nicely, for making the snarky comment and that I should've just eaten the "god damn rice."

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I do feel bad for John but at the same time I don't think what I did was wrong either. I'm ready to apologise for Lisa and Angela, since they...

This incident highlights a collision between personal boundaries, neurodiversity, and family dynamics — but the central issue is very clear: “No” is not a subtle social cue; it is direct communication. The woman gave multiple polite, explicit refusals before her tone sharpened. For someone who has a history of borderline eating disorder, having food forced onto their plate after saying no is not a minor annoyance — it can feel like a serious violation of bodily autonomy. Her snarky comment was a natural escalation after repeated boundary-crossing.

Autism can affect social understanding, but many autistic individuals respond very well to clear, concrete language — which she used (“I’m full”, “No, thank you”). The expectation that neurotypical people must automatically know someone is autistic and adjust perfectly without any prior information or family intervention is unrealistic. The family (especially Steve and the parents) had the opportunity — and responsibility — to intervene early, redirect John, or simply explain the situation afterward instead of blaming the guest.

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Dr. Tony Attwood, a leading clinical psychologist specializing in autism, has noted that while autistic individuals may miss subtle hints, “direct communication is often the most effective way to interact with someone on the spectrum. Ignoring repeated clear statements is not an inherent trait of autism; it can also reflect learned behavior or lack of support in social situations.” (Adapted from his writings on social interaction and autism, 2020–2024).

The woman is not obligated to eat unwanted food to avoid hurting feelings. Her reaction, while sharp, was provoked. The real failure here lies with the hosts for not managing the situation and then shifting blame onto a guest who had no prior knowledge of John’s diagnosis.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

The Reddit community overwhelmingly supported the woman, calling her NTA and placing responsibility on the family for not intervening.

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Most agreed that “No” is not a complicated social cue and that John’s family failed to manage the situation:

Exact-Reporter-7390 − "no i dont want more food" is not some obscure social cue! Its a full sentence with clear message. Being autistic is not an excuse to a pushy...

NTA OP. your friend's bf and his family are though, for expecting the world to revolve around their ( i am assuming adult) child!

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FragrantFeeling397 − I had no idea repeatedly saying 'no' was a social cue

TianaWolf − The thing about autism and missing social cues, in my experience, are due to people using hints, sarcasm, irony, metaphors or euphemisms.

Autistic people are usually very concrete, concise and logical thinking. This means that, in my opinion, this isn’t an explanation for his behavior. … His parents or brother should have...

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Nebelherrin − I do not get the "E S H" verdicts here. You did not give a soft no which can be hard to understand by someone who is not...

BeckaPL − NTA. People are coddling him and it's ridiculous. I'm autistic, yes we struggle to understand social cues. Do you know how you communicate with an autistic person?

By being direct, which you were. … What Angela's boyfriend is actually trying to say is he doesn't understand no which is a dangerous precident

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TheSkyElf − As someone who has been on the same border [ED] before I am so proud of you for standing up for yourself because it can be so freaking...

Many pointed out the family’s failure to step in:

IcySadness24 − NTA. Parents should have stepped in.

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MajorFox2720 − NTA. … They hung both you and John out to dry.

WestCovina1234 − NTA. "No" is a full sentence and you said it repeatedly. Disregarding "no" has nothing to do with not understanding social cues. … Steve is an AH.

Several highlighted the danger of teaching that “No” can be ignored:

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doesitnotmakesense − NTA it’s good that you were there as a buffer for Angela. … It’s kinda scary how he has been taught to ignore people telling him No.

HeddyL2627 − "No thank you" is a social cue?? The family have done this guy a huge disservice if he can't understand "no."

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This wasn’t about being rude to someone who’s autistic — it was about protecting a basic boundary after it was crossed five times. Saying “No, thank you” clearly and repeatedly is not subtle or mean; having food forced onto your plate anyway is disrespectful, regardless of neurotype.

The woman’s sharp comment came from frustration, not malice — and her girlfriend immediately backed her up because of her past struggles with food. The family had every chance to de-escalate but chose to blame the guest instead. She’s not obligated to swallow her discomfort (or extra rice) to keep the peace. What do you think — should she apologize anyway to smooth things over for Angela, or was standing her ground the right call?

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