AITAH for asking if my husband was picking us up dinner?
A family with influenza A is thrown into chaos when their son is rushed to the hospital with pneumonia, leaving the exhausted husband to buy food on the way home. The wife, who is also battling the same illness while caring for their two daughters, only asks if he will cook for everyone since he is out of the hospital. A heated argument ensues, where he hurls insults, declares her useless, and deliberately buys food only for himself.
What complicates the story is the extreme stress of being sick and waiting in the hospital, clashing with basic expectations of cooperation. She ends up ordering food for herself and her daughters separately, stunned that her husband considers cooking for his family an “inconvenience” even though she is willing to do the same even when she is sick.

‘AITAH for asking if my husband was picking us up dinner?’
The entire household reels from flu A, culminating in an ER trip for their feverish son.

Husband plans to grab food after the hospital, prompting a practical question from his wife.

The innocent inquiry sparks rage, name-calling, and a selfish dinner decision.


Her upbringing and sense of fairness fuel disbelief at his refusal to share the errand.



Family crises like widespread illness expose how couples actually divide their emotional and practical labor. The husband’s breakdown—from a polite question that escalates to profanity and deliberate dismissal—reveals self-righteousness disguised as exhaustion. What complicates the story is the implicit log many couples keep: he sees the hospital stay as “his” sacrifice while dismissing his wife’s daily care of their flu-stricken daughters.
Defenders may point to the stress of the emergency room, hunger, and fear of a sick child as legitimate causes. But the context crumbles under scrutiny; he chooses takeout over communication, punishment over cooperation. His refusal to feed his family while en route ranges from irritability to cruelty, especially when asked for just a few more words at the counter.
This may reflect a larger imbalance. Vulnerable verbal abuse erodes psychological safety faster than any virus can spread. As relationship expert Dr. John Gottman explains in The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, “Successful couples turn to each other in small moments—when getting milk, asking about their day, or grabbing another burger. Contempt in those moments predicts divorce with 93% accuracy.”
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Most users side firmly with the wife, calling out the husband’s selfishness as unacceptable.




![[Reddit User] − NTA. It makes no sense what the big deal was. If he stopped for one meal, what's the problem with picking up a few more for MEMBERS...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762334396452-5.webp)
A couple of voices urge context, wondering if this signals bigger issues without excusing the behavior.




Witty remarks highlight the absurdity while keeping things from boiling over.


The wife’s simple question exposed a husband’s shocking lack of basic consideration, turning a moment of potential teamwork into isolation and hurt. While illness amplifies tensions, his choice to insult and exclude rather than communicate reveals priorities that extend beyond one bad day.
Have you experienced partners weaponizing stress instead of leaning on each other? When does “I’m hangry” stop being an excuse and start being a red flag?
