AITA for being annoyed at my husband for getting the wrong pizza 3 times in a row?

A woman trying to cut chicken from her diet—part of a shift toward vegetarian eating—kept receiving spicy chicken pizza from her husband, who works at a place with a custom pizza counter. After clearly telling him twice that she no longer ate chicken and preferred simple mushroom and cheese, he brought her the wrong order a third time, this time blaming a coworker’s mix-up.

She expressed disappointment without yelling or making a scene, simply saying she’d get her own food instead. The car ride home turned silent, and when they arrived he slammed the door hard, demanded she open it, and called her an “ungrateful cnt.” He has not spoken to her since. She feels hurt by the name-calling and wonders if her mild reaction to the repeated mistake made her the asshole, especially since she believes he would react far worse in reverse.

‘AITA for being annoyed at my husband for getting the wrong pizza 3 times in a row?’

The pattern started innocently but quickly became frustrating after repeated clear instructions.

A few weeks ago my husband bought me a pizza from the place he works (it has a pizza counter where you choose your toppings) He got me spicy chicken.

I haven’t eaten chicken in months but I prob didn’t make it a big deal so I told him “I’m not really eating chicken atm so next time get me...

and says I got you a spicy chicken pizza. I was slightly pissed and said “I really don’t eat chicken anymore, I told you that the last time” I wasn’t...

I made it super clear that I didn’t eat chicken anymore and I especially didn’t like the cube chicken on the pizzas.

The third incident pushed her disappointment over the edge, but she kept her response calm.

So today he rang asking if I wanted a pizza made, I told him yes please.. cheese, spicy cheese, mushroom and onion. No problem.

I picked him up and he told me the lady mistook ‘spicy cheese’ for ‘’spicy chicken’ and my pizza had chicken on it AGAIN. The place he works sell pre...

When he told me I said “aww your joking me, I was looking forward to that. I’ll just go get my own” and we spent the car ride in silence.

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The situation exploded outside the car with aggressive behavior and harsh name-calling.

We get out of the car and he slams the door as hard as possible I said “I don’t know what you’re pissed about” and he said “open the fkn...

I would understand if I threw a whole fit and made a scene but I didn’t I just made it clear I was pissed that he got me chicken on...

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(trying to go full vegetarian, chicken was the only meat I ate for 2+years but I have stopped eating it months ago, apart from the pizza) I know I should...

but if I got him the wrong order 3 times in a row he would not be ok. And the name calling really hurt I don’t think I overreacted, I...

Three times receiving the exact food she had explicitly asked to avoid—after polite but firm reminders—moves beyond forgetfulness into carelessness or passive resistance. Whether intentional or not, the pattern dismisses her autonomy over her own dietary choices and turns a simple gesture into a source of frustration. Her reaction—quiet disappointment followed by planning to handle it herself—was restrained and reasonable; she didn’t yell, throw food, or escalate.

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The husband’s response—slamming doors, cursing, and using a deeply derogatory slur—represents a disproportionate escalation that shifts focus from the pizza mistake to verbal aggression and control. Name-calling at that level rarely stems from a single incident; it often reflects accumulated resentment or a pattern of devaluing the partner’s feelings.

Some might argue she should have shown more gratitude for the effort or let the third mistake slide to keep peace. Yet gratitude does not require silence when a boundary (no chicken) is repeatedly ignored. The issue isn’t the pizza—it’s the lack of accountability and the abusive language used when challenged. Healthy partnerships involve hearing and honoring each other’s preferences without punishment or insults when mistakes happen.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

The vast majority labeled the husband’s behavior as disrespectful and potentially passive-aggressive, with strong concern over the name-calling.

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PinkedOff − NTA, and it almost feels like he’s doing it on purpose. Is he against you going vegetarian or something?

Edcrfvh − NTA. 3 times is not an accident. This is so passive aggressive. Hubby doesn't agree with your decision to go vegetarian. That's why he overacted. Also if my...

Mlady_gemstone − he said “open the fkn door” then called me “One ungrateful cnt” that right there, i would have turned around and walked away. spent the night elsewhere with...

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my mom was in an abusive marriage just like this, would bring her food and it would be wrong and he would get angry and start in with the verbal...

always calling her the C word to the point where "she wondered if it was her name" NTA but you will be if you put up with that s__t and...

he knows you don't like spicey chicken pizza and he doesn't care. *You the woman will be grateful when the man of the house brings home food, you will eat...

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and you will be thankful for the food because HE brought it home. * <---what it looks like is going through his head. edit: the petty part of me would...

majesticjewnicorn − NTA. One time is a mistake. Two times is intentional. Three times is malicious. He isn't listening to you, nor respecting you.

This isn't about the Iranian yoghurt (for those who get the reference). There is more to this pie than the slice we are getting. ..

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DetectiveResident391 − Nta. My girl, any man who calls you a c#$t should be yeeted out of your life with extreme prejudice. It shows he has zero respect for you....

I'm betting there's this voice deep inside your gut telling you that he really didn't "forget" after the first time about the chicken. He just doesn't care about you.

Several commenters pointed to deeper control issues or deliberate disregard for her choices.

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ServelanDarrow − NTA. My guess (from experience, although in my case it was a parent) is that he doesn't want you to go vegetarian/vegan for some reason. Very passive-aggressive.

banjowashisnamo − Been said before, but this quote from Goldfinger is appropriate: "Mr Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's...

Sweeper1985 − NTA Escalating from 0 to 100 over a minor disagreement, slamming doors, calling you names. .. 🚩🚩🚩🚩

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A smaller group highlighted the red flags in his reaction and urged serious reflection on the relationship.

scatteredloops − NTA and the issue isn’t pizza. The deliberately getting the wrong order and calling you names seem like he’s trying to be manipulative. Is he always this awful?

Rhuthbarb − NTA He doesn't care what you want. And he calls you a c\*nt for getting \*checks notes\* the food you want. His behavior is not how you act...

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This incident started as a simple food mix-up but quickly exposed a troubling pattern of disregard and explosive anger. Three consecutive wrong orders after clear requests suggest either willful ignorance or passive pushback against her dietary change, while the verbal abuse and door-slamming reveal a much larger problem with respect and emotional regulation. Most voices online saw the pizza as a symptom, not the cause, and urged recognizing the red flags in his reaction.

Have you ever dealt with a partner repeatedly ignoring a clear boundary and then exploding when you point it out? How do you handle name-calling or aggressive outbursts over small issues? Do you think the repeated “mistakes” were accidental, or do they point to something deeper? Share your experiences below—we’re curious to hear how others navigate these moments of disrespect in relationships.

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