AITA for wanting support during a sad moment instead of getting food?
A 30-year-old man and his wife were already emotionally drained waiting for life-changing medical news about his step-father. After a long day of dread, they met at a park with their toddler to try to distract themselves. Moments later, his mother called with the worst possible outcome: the cancer had spread aggressively, and treatment options were unlikely to help.
While still processing the call, he needed to pass the devastating news to his sister because his mother was too overwhelmed. His wife — who had heard everything — said she needed the bathroom, so he asked her to watch the toddler for just a few minutes while he made the call. Instead, she became angry and sarcastic, insisting they should focus on getting food because “the news isn’t gonna change.” He felt hurt and unsupported; she held a grudge the entire evening, even while he was openly sobbing during chores. Is he wrong for wanting a brief moment of support instead of rushing to eat?

‘AITA for wanting support during a sad moment instead of getting food?’
OP began by explaining his emotional state and the looming medical appointment his family had been dreading all month:



The news arrived just as they were about to leave:



What followed shocked him:













When someone receives catastrophic medical news about a close family member, the brain and body go into acute grief/stress mode — emotional shock, disbelief, racing thoughts, and an urgent need to share the burden with loved ones (especially siblings). In that moment, the need for immediate emotional connection and support usually overrides almost everything else, including hunger.
A partner’s role during crisis is ideally to offer presence, empathy, and practical help — not to redirect focus to logistics like dinner. Dismissing grief with sarcasm (“the news isn’t gonna change”) and refusing to speak for hours while the person is visibly sobbing is emotionally neglectful and can feel like abandonment during the most vulnerable time.
That said, hunger + exhaustion + a toddler nearing meltdown + a hard workday can make anyone short-tempered. If the wife was already stressed, overwhelmed, or feeling unappreciated herself, her reaction may have been displaced frustration rather than deliberate cruelty. Still, the timing and tone were extraordinarily insensitive.
Healthy couples weather grief by leaning on each other — not by punishing one another for needing a moment of support. This incident may be a symptom of deeper communication or empathy gaps. Grief counseling (individual or couples) can help prevent small moments from turning into lasting resentment.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
The Reddit community erupted with this post — and most people sided with the poster, sending virtual hugs while glancing closely at the poster’s wife’s reaction.
Many people immediately supported OP, calling his wife’s behavior unacceptable:










Some commenters tried to contextualize the behavior while still acknowledging harm:


This is one of the most painful moments a person can face: receiving news that a loved one has a terminal illness, and then needing immediate support from someone who should be there – but instead receiving sarcasm, indifference, and hours of silence while that person is visibly grieving. The OP’s desire to inform their sister immediately is perfectly understandable; grief cannot wait until dinner time to subside.
The wife’s reaction—prioritizing food over her husband’s emotional pain—was truly cold and unsupportive. Whether it stemmed from pent-up stress, exhaustion, or something deeper, it left the husband feeling alone at a crucial time. Do you think this was just a temporary negative reaction under pressure, or did it reflect a larger behavioral pattern in how she handles OP’s difficult times? What could she actually do to support her husband right now?
