AITA for not objecting more to my grandpa having shortcake?

A 21-year-old took her 77-year-old grandfather to her favorite Japanese patisserie for coffee, only for him to order strawberry shortcake despite a doctor’s warning about high blood sugar. She gently reminded him once, then let it go when he insisted on a cheat day. Back home, the receipt sparked a firestorm from grandma.

What makes the story more complicated is the family dynamic: grandpa gifted the credit card, tracks her weekly ritual, and now faces blame shifted onto her for not policing his slice. Grandma scolded her over the phone, insisting elders need stricter guardians. The incident exposes tensions between autonomy, indulgence, and intergenerational nagging.

‘AITA for not objecting more to my grandpa having shortcake?’

A fixed Saturday routine drew grandpa’s curiosity about the consistent charges.

My(21) grandpa(77) gave me a credit card, in the use of which I have a very fixed pattern. Each Saturday, I have lunch at a mall. I switch the restaurants...

Intrigued by her coffee habit, he demanded a firsthand taste test.

Eventually, my grandpa got curious about me making the same amount of payment at the same shop every week. He became even more curious after finding out what I drink...

One reminder about health faded against his defense of occasional treats.

He said it’s ’pretty good’ and then decided to order Strawberry shortcake. Now his doctor had warned him that his blood sugar level was too high. I reminded him of...

The receipt at home unleashed grandma’s fury directed at the wrong target.

He also said an occasional cheat day won’t hurt. So I didn’t say anything further. Later went home, where my grandma saw the receipt, told him and then called me...

Letting a 77-year-old enjoy a single strawberry shortcake after dietary improvements isn’t neglect—it’s respect for autonomy. The granddaughter fulfilled her role with a mild reminder, then deferred to the adult who funds her outings and jogs daily. Critics like grandma project control issues, redirecting frustration from spouse to grandchild. Socially, over-policing seniors’ joys risks robbing them of life’s simple pleasures in the name of longevity.

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Opposing views frame indulgence as endangerment, yet evidence shows rigid denial harms mental health more than occasional sugar. What makes the story more complicated is the power shift: grandpa as provider expects freedom, while grandma enforces rules through proxies. Broader perspectives highlight how families often scapegoat younger members to avoid confronting equals.

Geriatrician Dr. Louise Aronson, in Elderhood, observes: “Quality of life trumps quantity when years are limited; a treat shared with family beats sterile compliance.”

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Most users defended the granddaughter, celebrating grandpa’s right to a sweet moment.

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Parking_Tangelo_6567 − NTA. Your grandpa sounds like a high-functioning adult who wanted to share an experience with you. (Which is, pardon the pun, sweet. )

Your grandma probably vented at you all that she couldn’t say to him. If you aren’t regularly taking him for risky foods, why does one treat have to be an...

Confident_Formal_693 − Honestly, NTA. It's not your job to control other grown adults. The man is 77 years old. If he wants to eat a shortcake every now and then...

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Editing to add: It's not your job to police what a grown person eats. He's also not wrong. If he's made changes to his diet to rectify his high blood...

Lia_Delphine − NTA if a man can’t have a strawberry shortcake every now and then at 80. What’s the point of living to 81.

Afraid_Ad_1536 − The dude is 77. I'll probably be doing heroin by that time. Let the old guy have a treat from time to time. Nta

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A couple acknowledged grandma’s worry but upheld personal choice.

Professional_Copy517 − Edit: NTA - He's a grown man, and someone you probably have looked up to as an authority figure.

Of course you're not going to chastise him Why is your grandmother not mad at HIM for going against HIS doctors orders? ?? Oh yeah, because men aren't expected to...

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Old-guy64 − As I nurse I tell people all the time that if your life is ALL about managing your disease, you aren’t really living. If he’s managing his diabetes...

Wandering_aimlessly9 − Nta. Your grandpa is 77. If he wants to take himself out one shortcake at a time he’s earned that right.

My one biggest regret with my mil was trying desperately to save her for my husband’s benefit. She should have gotten what she wanted and pass teo years earlier. She...

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silverbirch26 − NTA he's an adult and one piece of cake isn't a big deal

Two brought humor to spotlight the absurdity of the scolding.

HolSmGamer − NTA. You reminded your grandpa about his health so you did your due diligence, but it is your grandpa's decision to make.

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Virtual-Light4941 − Lmao he's 77 trying new things ! LET HIM! He doesn't have long anyway. Your grandma is out of line, you're not your grandpa's caretaker she is. And...

Let him have a bite ! It's not like he ate the whole entire thing ! The man jogs at 77 ! That's amazing ! I know plenty of 30...

One shortcake became a battleground for control, with a granddaughter caught between reminder and restraint. Grandpa asserted his cheat day; grandma outsourced enforcement. The consensus favors joy over jargon, especially for a jogging senior sharing coffee with family.

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Should grandchildren police grandparents’ treats, or is autonomy the real gift? How do you balance health warnings with the sweetness of shared moments?

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