AITA For Sentencing My Daughter To Community Service As Punishment?

A mother recently sparked debate after punishing her 9-year-old daughter for dramatically dumping an entire dinner plate—including mashed potatoes she suddenly decided she disliked—straight into the trash. Instead of a typical timeout or lost privileges, the mom chose community service: pulling her daughter out of school for a day to volunteer together at the local food bank. The goal was to teach the value of food while helping those in need. Her husband called it overly harsh, and now the mother wonders if she crossed a line.

This situation touches on a common parenting challenge: how to address wasteful or disrespectful behavior in children without sending the wrong message about kindness, responsibility, or helping others. Many families struggle to find punishments that truly teach lessons while avoiding unintended consequences.

‘AITA For Sentencing My Daughter To Community Service As Punishment?’

The conflict started during a regular family dinner last week.

My daughter's 9. During dinner once last week, she was getting upset we served her mashed potatos. She's eaten them before, even recently. Just decided now she doesn't like them.

Instead of communicating to us that she doesn't like it, or leaving it on her plate, or, hell, even secretly giving it to the dog during dinner, she decided to...

The mother decided on a hands-on lesson tied directly to the behavior.

I decided to punish her by having her volunteer at the local food bank. My work schedule is flexible so I can take tomorrow off, pull her out of school,...

The mother stands by her choice, but family and online opinions differ.

Husband says I'm being too harsh, but I will rain down fury for needlessly wasting food like that. At least the punishment is related to the crime, and she (and...

The core issue is the dramatic food waste and lack of communication from the child. The mother’s instinct to connect the consequence to the behavior—exposing the daughter to people who rely on food assistance—aims to build empathy and gratitude. However, many argue this risks souring the child’s view of volunteering, turning an act of kindness into something punitive and potentially dehumanizing for those receiving help.

A gentler approach, such as a calm conversation, clear expectations about table manners, or involving the child in meal preparation, could teach the same lessons without the risk of resentment. Broader perspectives show that rigid “clean your plate” rules or extreme punishments for preferences can lead to unhealthy relationships with food later in life.

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At 9 years old, children are still learning emotional regulation and expression. Punishing honest (if poorly expressed) dislikes by missing school or framing charity as discipline may discourage open communication and model that helping others is undesirable. Effective discipline often focuses on natural consequences, teaching moments, and positive reinforcement rather than high-stakes penalties.

Here’s What People Had To Say To OP:

Many commenters felt the punishment was too severe and risked negative long-term effects.

TrafficSharp3425 − While I like the idea of volunteering to help those who are food disadvantaged, I don't think it's appropriate to use it as punishment, and I don't think...

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She's 9. What she did was rude and wasteful. And yes, you are being too harsh. No snacks after dinner or for bedtime. No more wasting of food.

Outline clear expectations for her behaviour, what is acceptable (using her words) and what isn't (dumping her dinner in the trash) to express herself.

And since her opinions are that strong and were so inappropriately expressed, then perhaps she's old enough to contribute to the evening meal.

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Have her help with meal planning and execution, not as a punishment, but as a teaching opportunity, as a way of showing her the effort behind the meal.

hippyfishking − Seems a bit heavy handed but that’s for you to decide. I would say pulling her out of school is a bad idea though. If the idea is...

TheCumstard − Don’t make this a punishment, my family did the same with church and it’s strongly pushed me away from organized religion

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BellaSantiago1975 − I heavily disagree with forcing anyone to volunteer as punishment, unless it's picking up rubbish.

People who need a food bank don't need a stroppy, scowling 9 year old there who sees having to interact with them as punishment. It's really dehumanising.

No_Assignment_1576 − YTA. I'm a mom to two. .. I'm familiar with the frustration of food waste by kids. ... especially when you live on a pretty tight budget.

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Unless this is a common occurrence with her then yes, I'd say you overreacted. Even at 9 years old kids still need us to teach them how to people. At...

She just did what she either does at school or sees done at school. It's your job to talk to her about why home and school is different and what...

Some offered more neutral or mildly supportive takes, focusing on alternatives.

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TarzanKitty − I don’t care for it as a punishment. Why would you teach your child that helping others is a negative thing? Maybe you can volunteer with your child...

fckinsleepless − YTA. Wasting food is bad but if she said she didn’t want the potatoes, why scoop them out for her? Kids are allowed to have food preferences.

Punishing for this is just strange in my opinion. And preferring that she secretly feeds them to the dog will just cause her to hide her emotions instead of being...

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A couple of lighter or direct comments rounded out the discussion.

SnooWords4839 − YTA - A simple talk with your child on why they felt they needed to throw everything away and why they didn't want mashed potatoes should have been...

You are being harsh and maybe that's why daughter needed to throw it out, instead of talking. Sounds like it's your way or it's a crime. Your kid is 9,...

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maccrogenoff − YTA How would leaving the mashed potatoes on her plate be any less of a waste of food than throwing them away? Parents who are rigid about not...

My parents forced me to clean my plate. I still struggle with stopping eating when I’m full. Also, as others have pointed out, charity work should be a reward, not...

[Reddit User] − YTA Not for punishing your child, but for teaching an impressionable 9 year old that volunteering is something to be looked at negatively.

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This mother wanted to teach her daughter about gratitude and the real impact of wasting food, but the chosen method divided opinions sharply. While the intent was educational, many felt that linking volunteering to punishment could backfire and that a simple conversation or related chore would have been more effective for a 9-year-old.

What do you think—was pulling a child out of school to volunteer as punishment too harsh, or a creative way to drive the lesson home? How do you handle food waste or picky eating with your own kids? Would you ever use community service as a consequence? Share your experiences and opinions in the comments below.

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