AITA for making fun of a woman’s disability when she was rude about mine first?
A wheelchair user grew increasingly frustrated with his flatmate’s girlfriend after she repeatedly made rude and pitying remarks about his disability during her week-long stay. Despite politely correcting her outdated and inaccurate terminology, she continued, even asking about his legs in his presence and calling him “wheelchair bound.”
What makes the story more complicated is the poster’s decision to mirror her behavior by sarcastically referring to her legal blindness as being “glasses bound,” highlighting the patronizing tone she used toward him—prompting accusations of immaturity from both her and his flatmate.

‘AITA for making fun of a woman’s disability when she was rude about mine first?’
The poster’s flatmate’s girlfriend made him uncomfortable from the start with her remarks.



After correcting her terminology, her comments persisted, leading to frustration.



The poster turned the tables by mocking her own disability in the same style.





This domestic conflict reveals how unaddressed ableism can escalate into mutual resentment. The girlfriend’s repeated use of outdated language like “wheelchair bound”—despite direct requests to stop—demonstrates disregard for the poster’s expressed preferences and autonomy. Terms implying entrapment ignore how mobility aids enable independence, and her pitying tone reinforces harmful stereotypes.
The poster’s sarcastic retaliation effectively mirrored her condescension, forcing her to experience the annoyance firsthand. While petty, it served as a direct lesson after gentler corrections failed. Some might argue both parties stooped low, with the flatmate rightly noting that mocking any disability risks normalizing insensitivity. Yet the power dynamic differs: she initiated and persisted, while he responded defensively in his own home.
Broader societal issues include widespread ignorance about disability etiquette, where well-meaning but patronizing comments alienate rather than help. It underscores the importance of respecting individual language choices and intervening as bystanders—like the flatmate could have done sooner.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
Many users backed the poster, pointing out the girlfriend’s rudeness and the effectiveness of mirroring her behavior.








A couple of commenters offered balanced or alternative views while still supporting the poster.



Others injected humor to highlight the absurdity of the girlfriend’s actions.



In the end, the community largely sided with the wheelchair user, seeing his sarcastic responses as a justified way to highlight the girlfriend’s insensitivity after polite requests failed. The flatmate’s inaction until his girlfriend complained also drew criticism.
Have you ever used sarcasm to call out someone’s rude comments about disability? What’s the best way to educate people on preferred language without escalating tension?
