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People Have Full Control In These “Am I The Jerk?” Stories

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Dive into a whirlpool of personal dilemmas, ethical conundrums, and emotional rollercoasters in this captivating collection of real-life stories. From handling criticism at work, to navigating family politics, pet-related disputes, and even the etiquette of gift-giving; we explore the question, "Am I The Jerk?" (AITJ). Each story unravels a unique situation that will leave you questioning your own moral compass. Are they right, wrong, or just misunderstood? Read on to find out! AITJ = Am I the jerk? NTJ = Not the jerk WIBTJ = Would I be the jerk? YTJ = You're the jerk

22. AITJ For Not Being Able To Push My 600lb Cousin's Wheelchair At A Wedding?

QI

“My cousin is approaching six hundred pounds and requires a mobility scooter, as walking even short distances is very painful for her. In July, she has an out-of-state wedding to attend, and I was asked to taxi her to and from the event, as I’m not currently employed so my calendar is open.

Unfortunately, my car will not carry a mobility scooter, so my cousin will be required to use a wheelchair. The problem is that this event is being held in a public park. I can barely push her wheelchair on a paved surface, let alone across grass and dirt.

I tried contacting a couple of rental agencies in the area but they would not lease scooters in this case because of the off-road use. My aunt and uncle have also declined to loan me their truck, which is how my cousin normally gets around because I have a pretty poor driving history.

I did look into renting a vehicle that could carry the scooter, but my cousin cannot afford to pay for that and obviously, with me being jobless, I can’t either.

The distance from parking to the event area is about forty yards, which my cousin cannot handle walking.

About the best solution anyone’s come up with is that the party has a flatbed they’re using to tote supplies from the cars, but my cousin says she would feel humiliated having to be rolled in like that.

My cousin is furious with me, saying I’m shaming her by saying I cannot push her, but I feel it’s the honest truth.

Like 100% the thin wheels of the wheelchair are going to dig into the ground, and I am not strong enough to handle that. My cousin has done a lot for me in the past, so I do feel bad saying no, but I feel like I’ve looked into every option at this point.

AITJ for not being willing to just go and give it the college try?

Also, please don’t degrade my cousin. I know I can’t stop you, but it’s all been said before.”

Another User Comments:

“You are NTJ. Just FYI. Your car and its interior are not designed to have 600+ lbs in one seat.

I don’t care what car you have. Unless you have a pickup, and she rides in the back, your car is NOT made for that kind of heavy-duty work. For example: A Dodge charger can only carry 865lbs total if the weight is equally distributed. Yes, I know it can probably handle more, but tell your family it simply isn’t safe.

Maybe this can be her wake-up call? She’s too big to attend a wedding.” Rare-City6847

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. You’re not shaming your cousin, most people wouldn’t be able to push 600 lbs across dirt and grass. How long is the drive? I’ve watched My 600-Lb Life and most morbidly obese people can’t stay in the car very long without being in pain, especially if you have a smaller car.

Either way, your cousin should be upset with her parents for not loaning you their truck so you can take the scooter. It’s obvious that the truck would be the best solution since it’s made to haul heavier loads and can accommodate the scooter making it easier for your cousin to get around.” Zealousideal-Divide6

Another User Comments:

“Why is speaking truth to morbidly obese so darned difficult? She’s pushing a third of a ton in weight and she’s offended that you can’t shove her around on your own? I’m not degrading her. I’m describing her. That’s the truth and if she can’t manage her weight any better than that (there is one (1) mental illness that causes obesity – everything else is just something you should adapt your life to), why is it your job to do so.

No strength, no willpower, no tolerance for being called out on it. Let her get herself there. If something goes wrong, you’re liable for it. Given her attitude so far, I wouldn’t put it past her to sue. NTJ.” KaldaraFox

1 points - Liked by paganchick
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paganchick 6 days ago
NTJ and also why are you the one trying to find arrangements? If your cousin is the one that wants to go to the wedding then she should be the one to find a vehicle and a proper mobility aid.
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21. AITJ For Wanting To Rent An Apartment Instead Of Living In My Dad's Annex?

QI

“I am recently 18 years old. I am currently working two separate part-time jobs, with a monthly income after tax of roughly 2.5k. In about 6 months’ time, I will have garnered enough finance to put a deposit down on a rental. Both jobs are very secure and are contract so I will be in them for nearly 18 months guaranteed. I want to rent a 2-bed apartment that’s about 30 minutes from me.

I would be much closer to work opportunities and still be close to home. The apartment is roughly 1.7k including tax and fees and other costs for me to live there like food and electric. I have more than enough to pay for it, and I have a lot in savings for emergencies and other things.

My dad is completely set on the idea of moving to a remote house that has an annex I can live in and pay him rent. I have tried to explain several times that I want my own responsibilities and freedom and to be able to start fresh and things but he just won’t listen.

He says that I will still be free but I will still be tied to him as he is still supporting me and stuff. I just want to be able to support myself.

I have stated that I will still keep in active contact with them and still visit lots.

I am definitely not going to go AWOL or stop contact. I just think my dad has put a little idea in his mind of what he wants to happen which I do not want to be a part of really as remote living in a cottage thing isn’t for me, I want to be in the city riverfronts in an apartment kind of thing.

It’s just what I prefer.”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ but your father might be trying to help. I understand your urge for independence but after a couple of months of burning through your salary on rent and bills, you will see your father’s offer with different eyes.

I was looking forward to being alone but when life got real I would have wished to have the opportunity to live by my parents for a few years to save money. All my brothers-in-law had that chance and they are all much better off financially than we are.

If your rent is 65% of your salary you won’t have much left at the end of the month for fun, which at your age you should be doing.” Upset_Reflection8320

Another User Comments:

“NTJ, of course. But unless you are planning on getting a roommate, please get a smaller and cheaper place.

Two bedrooms and 1.7k in rent is a LOT when you are 18 and earning 2.5k. Unless you have a massive collection of some sort, you do not need this amount of space, and whatever you can save on rent, is huge. Unless the difference is minimal, like $100,- a month.

In which case, I’d seriously consider getting a roommate. Do it with a contract, though.” TheGrimDweeber

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. You need to think smaller for a first apt. I make more than you, and I still have roommates. A good place for rent is 25% of income.

Utilities such as electricity, internet, water, and gas are next at another 10%-15%. After that, you have transportation that can range anywhere from 15%-25% with car payment, gas, and insurance. Savings I would try to do at a minimum $500 a month. Anything left over can go to entertainment such as streaming media, games, camping, or whatever your interests are.

I get that your parents might help out, by 2.7k monthly is hardly a strike out on your own money.” Hugh_Jass_Clouds

1 points - Liked by Joels
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20. AITJ For Refusing To Pay Extra For A Past Due Utility Bill?

QI

“I’m (26F) renting a room in someone’s house while I conduct some short-term training for work.

I pay $800 with utilities included for a room (12×10) in a modest house. I don’t mind the rent because I get a stipend specifically for housing from my job and I was a bit desperate at the time. My original agreement with the owner is that I pay $800 in rent to include Wi-Fi, electric, water/sewer, and natural gas costs.

I have one shelf in the refrigerator & a bottom shelf in the freezer to use. I provide my own food (that the owner eats from time to time), laundry essentials, and all hygiene items for myself down to the toilet paper.

Recently, I saw an open utility bill on the kitchen table.

It’s a gas shut-off notice. Now, I’ve been here roughly two months and I’ve paid my rent on time each month. The bill also reflected times when I didn’t live here. The owner is now demanding that I pay towards the shut-off amount as well.

I told her that I will NOT be paying more because a lot of the costs were prior to me moving in and because I’ve paid my rent on time and I expected my money for utilities…to go to the utilities. She owns the house and my rent covers a decent of the mortgage ($1350 per month).

She also works.

I’m only renting here for about 3 more months and have the means to move elsewhere if necessary.

With all of that being said, AITJ for not coughing up more money?”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ and don’t you dare pay anymore! If the rent stipulates utilities, you don’t have to pay a dime more.

I rent out rooms and am very lax about utilities so when I got a hefty bill of almost 3x normal, I asked for help and one roomie said “of course, no problem”. Still haven’t seen the other, lol, but she does a lot of maintenance work and has had her friend over a lot.

So will likely help as well. If I messed up myself, I would be hesitant to even ask for an advance on next month’s rent.” lmmontes

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. If you need short-term housing there are a bunch of extended stay hotels in the area that should get you through your stay.

I know the housing market there is a bit of a mess, but there is no excuse for the landlord to not pay their own darn bills.” Narzie

1 points - Liked by paganchick
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19. AITJ For Calling The Police On My Brother For Using My Car Without Permission?

QI

“I (32m) have a little brother Kyle (28m). We did get along quite well when we were younger but not much now (we manage each other). For now, he lives in my basement because he can’t afford a house (but can easily afford a car).

He messed up his car somehow and he took it to get repaired. I’ve offered him to use my car as I can just bike to work. I only let him use it for 2 days until his car was fixed, that was a week ago.

He keeps using my car when he has his own.

I needed to pick up my daughter (6F) and my son (4M) because their school had a leak that they found last minute. So I went to go to my car when it wasn’t there.

I phoned my brother to bring the car back now and he said “I’m using it, wait your turn”. This isn’t the first time he has done this. I took his car to get the kids, when I got back I phoned the police saying my brother stole my car, gave them all the details and they found him at a McDonald’s.

They asked if I wanted to press charges I said not now but if it happens again I will.

Got back to my house and he yelled at me with my kids behind me. I told him to go to the basement and stay there.

He took my car multiple times, he has his own car that’s fixed now, I pay for my car not to be used by him. So AITJ?”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ your brother’s become entitled. He’s just taking anything he can get & more and he’s not respecting boundaries.

If you have to call the police to get those boundaries enforced those boundaries so be it. Don’t let him turn this around and blame you. You did not overreact. He is not respecting the boundaries you’ve said, he’s changed them and thinks he’s entitled to do that.

I think in cases like this the charge is actually something like taken without permission because it’s something you’ve lent him in the past and continue to do so but he doesn’t relinquish it when he’s supposed to. I could be wrong but I think it’s a slightly less serious charge.

When you think about it there has to be a distinction because you would want someone who broke into your house at night took your keys and stole your car to be sentenced much more seriously than someone who you lent your car and they didn’t bring it back, or someone who’s generally/occasionally allowed to use it but used it at a specific time they weren’t allowed to.” [deleted]

Another User Comments:

“Everyone’s the jerk. You called the police. It’s not their job to do stuff like this if you don’t intend on following through, you wasted their time and endangered your brother. This wasn’t an emergency, you had a car to get the kids.

Forget your brother. Time for him to move his backside out. Taking your car is jerk enough, the attitude when you called is past that line. Bottom line? Do something about him without wasting everyone else’s time.” torgeaux42

1 points - Liked by paganchick
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18. AITJ For Not Wanting To Spend Long Hours With My Partner's Loud Family?

QI

“My (23F) partner (26M) loves loves loves his family. He’s always telling me that family is the most important thing to him. And… I get it, he didn’t have the most supportive parents so his siblings were his main source of emotional stability.

So every once in a while we go over to his brother’s house, and every time we go there are at least two or more of his siblings already there (big family).

And I always kind of brace myself for impact if you will because I’m very introverted, and they are loud, VERY loud. The issue is that because they are so loud, and I am so not, I naturally become completely invisible.

We are usually there for many hours at a time, in which I usually don’t have the slightest chance to speak.

(I try to ask his family questions but that never goes both ways ya see) Usually, I’m fine for the first couple hours then after that, being invisible starts to really wear on me and I feel like crying.

So we recently went over to his brother’s house and I, again, prepared myself.

Except this time his brother’s kids were there, who are, to be completely honest, really horrible kids. All they do is scream and run around (and occasionally hit people). And everyone in the family thinks they’re adorable. The first couple hours I was fine like usual and then I started feeling like I needed to leave.

I told my partner I was tired and needed to go home and he told me we should wait until after the food got there (late night order, this was three hours in). After he told me this I completely zoned out. I pretty much stared straight ahead and/played with the cat in another room.

We ate and I started getting my stuff and then we left. My partner told me I seemed like I really didn’t want to be there which was disappointing for him, and embarrassing in front of his family. After a long conversation, I told him, after already really long days, I don’t like hanging out with his family because they are too loud.

Me zoning out was my attempt to remain sane/get the point across I needed to leave. I also told him I’m invisible anyway and I doubt his family noticed. He was really sad and disappointed and told me I just have to get to know them better (which I told him is difficult because I don’t have the chance to speak).

Anyway long story still long, AITJ for acting like I didn’t want to be there?

Another User Comments:

“No jerks here, just different perspectives and a lack of communication. I get it, I’m also an introvert and don’t like loud gatherings or obnoxious children.

But you should start being more assertive in that. You have a battery that drains more quickly than his does. You should probably come together and compromise. Either stay for shorter periods of time or assert that you don’t need to go to EVERY function.

But, for the sake of civility, try to not be critical of the family. However, you two, while only three years apart, are in completely different stages of your life right now. You never said how long you two had actually been in a relationship, but you need to be honest with yourself and each other.

The point of a relationship is testing compatibility. That may not be there but it’s up to you to decide. Not saying you should break up, but breaking up because you were honest with him and yourself is better than staying together by lying to yourself.” echoCashMeOusside

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. This is the type of situation that calls for compromise. You’re obviously trying your best, and your partner comes from a different family background than you do, so be mindful that he will probably have difficulties understanding your point of view.

Make it clear that your boundaries are being pushed. You’re making an effort to be a part of the family, and it’s going unnoticed. This is now on him to compromise by either a) leaving when you tell him you’re ready or b) making an active effort to include you (as it does not seem from what you describe that he even acknowledges your presence).

Make it clear that you respect his family values, but you wish to also either be included more or wish for him to respect the limits of your social battery. If he feels like you “just need to get to know them better” then he needs to make equal effort to make sure you’re comfortable and actually able to do so.” punkswamp

Another User Comments:

“No jerks here: You’re allowed to feel uncomfortable and he’s allowed to be sad. You two might be able to come up with a compromise (2 cars so you can leave earlier than him, safe word to let him know you’ve had enough).

It also might be you’re not ever going to be okay with his family, which sounds like it’s going to be a problem for the relationship. My husband’s family is large and loud too. They interrupt and talk over each other. I spoke with his mother about it and she told me to just jump in and interrupt back.

My hubs (then partner) would help me be heard, which I appreciated. It was like exercise – I got better the more I practiced. If I pulled on my finger it was a sign it was time to go. He used this with my family too.

I also took headache medicine before we went over because they were so loud I’d get headaches.” debdnow

1 points - Liked by Joels
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17. AITJ For Getting Upset About My Husband Using Our Cutting Board For Baby Items?

QI

“My husband and I (both 30s) had a really big fight last night over the dumbest thing. I’d accept whatever judgment.

We have this wood cutting board that he uses to cut raw meat/seafood. He sometimes washes it in the dishwasher (told him not to), other times he washes by hand with soap.

I told him I find the surface unhygienic for baby material and to please not put pump parts or bottles on the surface of the cutting board. We’ve had small fights about this before as well. He promised he wouldn’t do it anymore after the last one.

Well last night, I found him washing and putting wet pump/bottle parts on the cutting board again. I reminded him we talked about this, but he said “it’s fine” and continued to do so. This repeated itself 3 times. Eventually, I just walked over and started to grab the baby stuff and rewash them myself.

He took them and said “fine, I’ll do it”.

I asked him why he continues to do this even though I had expressed my opinion about it. He said, “You think it’s dirty, I don’t think it’s dirty. I think it’s clean, it’s probably cleaner than the dishwasher rack.

I’m going to keep doing it because that’s what I believe.”

I then got really mad because he had promised me this, did it behind my back, got caught, then essentially disregarded my concerns. I told him I felt hugely disrespected, not heard, and disregarded. He said I was blowing up about small things and forcing him to make promises.

So was I the jerk for getting mad at him over a small thing (for continuing to place baby items on the wooden cutting board)?”

Another User Comments:

“Even if I disagreed with my partner and thought they were being germaphobic (which I don’t) I would compromise over such a small thing.

All you’re asking is that the bottle/pump parts not be put on the chopping board. It’s not a big ask. Personally, I agree, baby bottle parts shouldn’t be placed on the wooden chopping board, but I think that’s not the main point.

You’re the one pumping so it’s not a big deal to follow your small request. Why does your husband think this is the hill to die on? NTJ.” FloppyEaredDog

Another User Comments:

“NTJ because he lied to you and broke a promise after you’d previously talked about it.

Also, why the heck is he putting things on the cutting board? If it’s wood, that dripping/pooling water isn’t exactly doing it any favors. Also…if the cutting board has visible knife cuts, it needs to be sanded or replaced because those cuts will hold bacteria.

Especially since you’re not supposed to use super strong cleansers as they can get into the wood (since it’s a porous material). “You said you’ll keep doing it because it’s what you believe. What if I was doing the same thing? If I thought it was fine to feed our baby food off the ground and you thought it was unsanitary, wouldn’t you be mad that I did it behind your back?

I only asked you not to do the baby things this way because I am being careful about our baby. Even if you think I’m overreacting – it’s a very small change, for our son/daughter’s safety and hygiene. Don’t you want to be as careful as possible with our baby?

Or do you care more about doing things your own way?”” Trouble_in_Mind

Another User Comments:

“NTJ, but your husband is, and he’s needlessly a jerk. This is the sort of behavior that makes offending items ‘disappear’: ‘Honey where’s the wood cutting board?” “Oh, that?

When you were at work it accidentally caught fire, completely burnt to a pile of ash – here use this glass one.’ Honestly, I don’t know the best way to clean wood cutting boards/ how to properly sterilize them/or if they can go in the dishwasher, thankfully I’m married to a vegetarian so I don’t have meat to worry about – but I do know if my partner expressed a concern for me NOT to use X for X; I’d go along with it for the sheer fact; it’s important to them.

That’s the main thing. Unless he can provide you peer-reviewed ‘wood cutting board safety guidelines’ and also prove that he’s following all of them; he should just put the baby stuff where you want the baby stuff. This is your husband’s child too; why not err on the side of hygiene?

INFO: Do you have any other cutting boards? Do you have a designated ‘drying place for baby items’? I know ‘just buy something new’ isn’t always easy for everybody but you might pick up a colorful inexpensive drying mat for the baby stuff – it stays put, and only baby stuff goes on it.

Maybe if you tried explaining it using feelings vs trying to argue the ‘facts’, it sounds like he’s got it in his head that SCIENCE SAYS: THIS IS FINE! If you let him know that even if it’s over the top you’re trying to be as safe as possible with the baby’s things, ‘science’ or not this issue stresses you out, whether he’s ‘right’ or not; you are asking him to please respect your feelings.” CarrieCat62

1 points - Liked by Joels
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16. AITJ For Not Giving My Newly Adopted Cat To My Uncle?

QI

“While I was on vacation, I (23F) asked my uncle (60sM) to take care of my Siamese cat for two weeks. When I came back to pick him up, he couldn’t stop talking about how great the cat had been behaving and showed me photos of them doing things together and then asked if he could keep him.

I stood there in silence for a while since I did not know how to respond. Although I found this cat on the street about two months ago, I have become attached to him. My mom, who went with me to pick up the cat, mentioned that this would be a great idea since I am so busy with grad school and work and also because I already have a dog while my uncle does not have any pets.

My mom also mentioned to my uncle how I did not intend to keep the cat in the first place (I tried to do the right thing and find its original owner). I felt like I was being cornered so instead of saying no, I asked for a few days to think about it.

Now, in the past year, my uncle has lost his son to muscular dystrophy, gotten divorced, and moved to a new town which has made him feel a lot of emotional stress and I see how this would benefit him and how much more attention the cat would receive.

But I found the cat and we have built a bond.”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. I definitely see the tough position you are in, but the hesitation and shock are the only info you need. You have bonded and you don’t want to give up your cat.

If you feel he is receptive you can tell him that if your life ever changes and you need to at that time you would consider it, or if you need to go out of town, you would let him watch your cat again if he enjoys that, but you do not foresee you parting with them anytime soon.

Side note your mom sounds a lot like my mom, always stressing about me and my pets.” Few-Wafer2897

Another User Comments:

“No jerks here, except your mom. I’ve pet-sat before and absolutely fell in love with the animal, and asked my friend if I keep them.

They declined, which I understand. Your uncle definitely needs a pet companion as well, and he bonded with your cat. But, that’s your cat. He’s not a jerk for asking, you’re not one for declining. Your mom is a jerk for trying to guilt you into doing it though.” lace4151

Another User Comments:

“NTJ, I’d be furious he even has the nerve to ask and I’d be even more mad at your mom for encouraging it and putting you on the spot like that. It’s not like you were looking to get rid of the cat or treating it poorly.

Pet sitting isn’t just some trial run to see if you like the animal so you can keep it. Nobody is entitled to your pets and if he just wants a well-behaved pet what is he gonna do if the cat does something wrong?

Just dump it? Yeah no. If you want a well-behaved pet you have to put in the work and be willing to train it.” Future-Pudding

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paganchick 6 days ago
NTJ yea if anyone ever asked to keep one of my pets they would get slapped. Take uncle to the local pound and tell him to go crazy
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15. AITJ For Refusing To Pay For Cleaning After My Puppy Dirtied A Woman's Pants?

QI

“I have 2 dogs (10y and 14 weeks). We usually go for walks in a city forest, which is a “real” small forest in the middle of the city.

There was heavy rain the day before and the paths are dirt, not paved. So expect dirty shoes and paws.

I have had the puppy for 3 weeks now and she is obviously still in training so I keep her leashed all the time.

When we do our walks, we usually pass by a lot of people, dogs, bikes, joggers, etc. and she’s very relaxed and doesn’t pay much attention to people just passing by that don’t bother her.

We were almost back to our car when we passed an older lady with bright white pants. I didn’t pay attention to her at first and we were already past her when she squatted down and started to coo and talk in a very high-pitched voice directly to my puppy.

Of course the puppy immediately jumped at her in delight before I could even react and she left a lot of very muddy paw prints on the woman’s trousers.

I was very apologetic at first but then the woman started to go off at me how I must have my dog in control at all times and it’s my fault, so she wants me to pay for the cleaning and requested my info.

I laughed at first because I thought she can’t be serious, then told her in a friendly way that she should just have ignored the puppy, and not squat down and speak to her directly – that is an invitation to a dog. Also, she should have asked me first so I could restrain the puppy if she wanted to pet her.

Plus, she is 3.5 months old, she is almost still a baby, she should know that a puppy can’t be perfectly trained yet, and I had her on the leash.

Unfortunately, she wasn’t having any of it and then threatened to call the police on me because my other dog was unleashed even though she technically is required to be leashed. As she’s already 10, while she enjoys going on walks, she follows me around very closely to my legs, she doesn’t stray, doesn’t wander off the path, she doesn’t chase anything or anybody.

She may go into the bushes a few steps to do the business, then come back and basically stick to my legs again. She enjoys sniffing and watching the ducks, and as she does it without bothering other people or animals, I undo her leash.

She didn’t have any part in this, she just stood next to me, doing nothing at all.

I still refused to give out my info and told her to just call the police, let’s see if they come (it’s a big city, police don’t come for petty things, not even for car crashes when there are no injuries).

She tried to follow us for a few minutes but I decided to just walk a few more rounds in the forest and she seemed to get tired of walking through the muddier paths so she disappeared.

I was very upset at her at first but now that 2 days have passed, I wonder if I should have paid for the darn cleaning, even though she just shouldn’t have talked to my dog in the first place, or at least asked me first so I could have time to react.

Am I the jerk here?”

Another User Comments:

“ESH – She should have asked before petting your dog. Her dirty pants are her own fault, and she was lucky she didn’t get bit. You (OP) should be keeping an eye on your puppy and – LEASH YOUR DOG.

If your dog is in an area where a leash is required, LEASH YOUR DOG. You’re lucky something worse than dirty pants didn’t happen. People and dogs are both unpredictable. Your unleashed dog is a bigger issue and risk here than anything else.” rievealavaix

Another User Comments:

“ESH. You’re not in the wrong for the puppy scenario, you ARE a jerk for having ANY dog off-leash. I am often hiking and there are corners or just blind spots where it’s hard to see an oncoming dog and someone else’s unleashed dog sets my leashed dog off.

It doesn’t matter how good yours is, you never know how another dog is going to respond and that puts your dog, and really everyone around in danger.” GaryHadALittleLamb

Another User Comments:

“This reminds me of the 54 million dollar pants case. Just how expensive were that lady’s pants for her to kick up such a ruckus?

First, that lady should not have expected that OP’s dog would just sit or not react to her actions. It’s a pup. It’s prone to being playful. Second, she should not expect that all pets have been trained or have the same behavior. Even trained pets forget and act or react to sudden stimuli in ways contrary to their training.

Third, it’s not like OP was the one who brought the dog close to her. She was the one who approached the dog and decided to interact with it. She didn’t even ask OP for permission to do so. That lady has no reason to ask OP to take responsibility for consequences arising from her own actions.” PacifistWarFreak

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14. AITJ For Quitting My Job Due To Unwanted Shift Changes And Concerns About Company Stability?

QI

“I have been working for a company since January and in that time I have worked Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., generally.

Sometimes I would work 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and I occasionally covered Sundays, but most consistently I worked M-F. My coworker is quitting in July and they have informed me that I will take over their position in its entirety until they can find a replacement.

My coworker works 2-10 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Not only do I feel like this is taking my summer away, but I had several plans for the remainder of the year that occurred on Saturday. And based on my field, it is unlikely they will be able to quickly find a replacement.

In addition, I am no longer even doing the job I was hired for and I do not have any interest in what my coworker does, even though I have enough experience with it to get by.

However, my concern is that my department is very small (seven people total) and we have had significant amounts of people leaving over the last month (two of which being upper management).

I am worried that I am leaving the company in a position that they will not be able to recover from.

I have a new job lined up, but due to the hour change, I am planning to quit earlier and just take a few weeks unpaid.

Am I leaving the company in a bad position? I plan to give one of my managers a heads up that I am thinking about quitting next week and then will be giving a two-week notice the following.

WIBTJ?”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. Stop taking the company’s feelings into consideration.

They would not do the same for you, as evidenced by you not wanting these shifts and them forcing them on you. “I plan to give one of my managers a heads up that I am thinking about quitting next week and then will be giving a two-week notice the following.” DON’T.

Just give the two weeks when you were planning.” badger0511

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. “Your coworker quit. You need to work his job and hours at your current pay effective now.” “I don’t want to work that, I have other plans based on my current hours.

I also feel like this job isn’t what I signed up for and am really not enjoying it any longer.” “Well we all need to make sacrifices, so you need to do this.” “I have another job now, so I quit.” Shocked Pikachu face from the company.

But outside of a joke, yeah looks like this company is sinking fast. Jump ship now before it fully crashes and you’re left scrambling. Take a few weeks off and go hiking mid-day or enjoy seeing family/friends for a bit.” Blinken01

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. Did they even bother to ask you if you could/would be ok with changing hours? If not, they didn’t take into consideration how that change would upend your entire life. If they just told you that they were moving your position and schedule around, and it doesn’t work for you, then they should probably expect you to move on for the hours and position you can and want to work.

You weren’t hired for her job or her hours, so they shouldn’t fake shock and surprise when you resign. You are not responsible for the staffing issues the company has to deal with. Do what is right for YOU! Guaranteed the company doesn’t have your best interest in this situation.” racingturtlesforfun

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13. AITJ For Keeping My Ex's Sentimental Stuffed Animal Until She Returns My Game Console?

QI

“I (21F) told my ex (20F) that I was moving soon and to come get her stuff.

So I put what I thought was all of it in a closet. I asked her to bring my video game console that I bought while we were together and after playing mind games with me she said she would.

When she came she did not have my game, she left half the closet full of things she did not want and left a dog bed on my front porch as trash.

After a couple of days, I asked my sister, as she was on better terms with my ex, to ask about my game and she said she wanted her dead grandma’s stuffed animal.

Apparently, it was in my other closet. I told her that I wanted my game console back if she wanted her stuffed animal back.

She got angry and said that it was wrong of me to keep it because it is sentimental to her and that I should’ve just asked for it when she came and then confessed that she let a friend borrow it, so she never had it in the first place.

She then had the audacity to tell me it’s not about the stuff it’s about the principle. She said that she thinks I kept the stuffed animal on purpose and that because I left her and kept the apartment, I owe her everything back and more.

So am I the jerk for keeping her stuffed animal until I get my game back?”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. She’s making a big deal out of it before she was trying to deflect from the fact that she didn’t have the console and probably wasn’t going to get it back.

Get your money and don’t feel bad about keeping the stuffed animal. She knows exactly how she can get it back.” Superb_Space7318

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. That said, consider her to be an expensive lesson. Abusers don’t play by generally accepted concepts of “fair.” If it doesn’t benefit them, it isn’t fair in their eyes.

If you know which grandma (maternal or paternal) the stuffed animal came from, maybe return it to that parent. Another option is to give it to one of your ex’s siblings, maybe. I’m sorry you had this experience. Hopefully, your next significant person will be an improvement.” Putrid_Security_349

Another User Comments:

“NTJ she stole first plus you didn’t steal the teddy bear you just ended up happening to have it end up in the other closet. You could file a police report but you are choosing to be nice though maybe see if your sister would be willing to do the trade-off so it’s more honest.” Present_Accident_462

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12. AITJ For Being Upset After My Roommates Donated My Left-Behind Items?

QI

“I recently came back from an extended stay out of the US, during which I left my mini-fridge, microwave, and large rug with my roommates because I had provided all three for our apartment.

I will say that I didn’t ask before leaving the stuff. I assumed that they’d appreciate it (and yes, we all know the saying, to assume makes a fool out of you and me…).

Our lease ended about a week before I got back to the US, and I had moved everything except for said fridge, microwave, and rug out before leaving.

I’d even found someone else who the roommates liked to sublet from me for the rest of the duration of our lease. Before leaving, I asked my roommates to either keep the fridge, microwave, and rug for me for a week after moving out or let me know if they couldn’t because I had other friends in our building who could’ve taken them for me.

Lo and behold, when I got back, I texted my roommates about where I could pick up my stuff and they donated my fridge and microwave and abandoned my rug!!! They weren’t sorry, and they didn’t see why I was angry that they did that.

I was trying to be nice by not depriving them of ways to store and prep food and of a nice rug, and then they literally got rid of my stuff without even asking?!?! My super actually helped me find a cheap new fridge and microwave, so the money isn’t really the issue anymore, but I’m still mad and my former roommates are mad at me for being mad at them… They claim that they didn’t want to bother me while I was away, but honestly, I just think that they were too lazy to text me/deal with my stuff.

Am I the jerk for wanting them to at least apologize? And, was I the jerk for leaving the fridge, microwave, and rug to begin with?”

Another User Comments:

“Wait so I’m kind of confused because your first sentence you said – “I will say that I didn’t ask before leaving the stuff.” But in the second paragraph, you’re kind of stating the complete opposite with this – “Before leaving, I asked my roommates to either keep the fridge, microwave, and rug for me for a week after moving out or let me know if they couldn’t because I had other friends in our building who could’ve taken them for me.” If you ask them before leaving if they could keep the fridge, microwave, and rug for you in your first paragraph that you didn’t ask before leaving the stuff.

Because you either didn’t ask if it was okay to leave the stuff before you left or you did ask them before you left. Also when you ask them before you left if they could keep the items for you or let you know if they couldn’t, did they agree?

Did they tell you they would? Because if you did ask and they did say that they would then yes you have the right to be upset. But if you didn’t ask at all or you didn’t get a reply from them when you asked then no you don’t have a right to be upset with them as you even put it – “to assume makes a fool out of you and me…” So NTJ if you did ask and you did get a reply but YTJ if you didn’t ask or you didn’t get a reply.” afk_scorpio66

Another User Comments:

“INFO – when you asked them to hold on to your stuff for a week or let you know…did they agree? If you didn’t get an actual answer, then it was likely they weren’t going to deal with your stuff the way you wanted them to.

YTJ as I’m imagining how one of your roommates could have ‘kept’ a fridge, microwave, and rug (large items) for a week, and that’s a huge imposition. They’d have to move them and find a place to store them in their new apt for a week.

I wouldn’t do it. NTJ because they should have told you ‘no way’ so that you would talk to your other friend and make arrangements for them to pick the stuff up. You can be mad at them, but it won’t help you at all.

I suggest letting this one go.” tinny36

Another User Comments:

“YTJ. You abandoned your lease and left behind stuff that had no value and expected people you left behind to go out of their way. You should apologize if you expect to have a relationship with any of these people moving forward.

Although the fact you never call them friends leads to the fact you only care about YOURSELF. Also putting all those words in caps makes you seem like a jerk.” Equivalent-Reward384

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User Image
Joels 5 days ago
Dude your contradicting yourself which means you’re lying and liars are jerks.
0 Reply

11. AITJ For Making A Joke About My Grandpa's Baldness In Response To His Comment On My Ripped Jeans?

QI

“I (14F) like to wear ripped jeans, I think they’re cute and stylish. My grandpa (74M) does not like ripped jeans, every time he’s over at my house and I’m wearing them he makes comments like “Did you trip and rip your jeans open?” or “I think you’re missing a part of your pants.” Now he usually means it in a playful way but it gets kind of annoying.

So the other day I had family over for dinner for my birthday and of course, I was wearing ripped jeans. We were all sitting at the table eating and my grandpa stopped the conversation to ask me if “I got these jeans for half off since most of it is missing.” Everyone laughed but I felt rather embarrassed, why’d he have to do it on my birthday in front of everybody?

I decided I wasn’t going to let this get to me so I replied with, “Yeah I got it from the same store you got your hair at.” (He’s balding.) I meant this playfully and everyone laughed, including him but later that night my grandma phoned my mom to tell her I was being disrespectful and I needed to apologize.

I tried texting my grandma to resolve the issues but she refused to talk to me. AITJ?”

Another User Comments:

“Okay if your grandpa laughed what’s your grandma’s problem? NTJ. Just text your grandpa and ask him if he did not like it. And also tell him (respectfully so you avoid more conflict) that you don’t like his comments and would be happy if he stopped them.

If he was actually upset with your comment, apologize and put an end to it, but like I said, clearly tell him you’d appreciate it if he stops commenting on your pants too.” acool_username

Another User Comments:

“This is actually a hard one. I know ripped jeans are a thing, not a thing I have ever understood.

Lol, it is hard for me to bite my tongue when one of my family members wears them. I usually can but there is one family member that takes it so far over the top that there are hardly any jeans at all, mostly just the top, the butt, and the seams. I’m very supportive of young people, but in the dead of winter, those jeans, a hoodie, and snow boots just get me laughing.

Thankfully he knows how much I adore him, and I have bought him the jeans that he cuts up (ugh!). I would suggest a conversation with your grandpa, and compromise. but the comment about his hair was mean because it is not something he can control.

I always told my kids that they could have any style they wanted but that sometimes they had to modify it if the situation called for another type of clothes. (like dinner with their grandma, who was a snarky nightmare.)” RobinsRoads05

Another User Comments:

“NTJ I can’t stand this mentality that the children should have to take a joke but they better not dare make one.

You should tell the grandma straight that if he can make a joke he can also take it. You should tell Grandma that just because you’re 14 doesn’t mean others can disrespect you and you won’t do it back that it’s a two-way street. It’s extremely childish of your GM to call your mom instead of respecting you enough to call you and tell you, that’s another thing I would bring up with her.

She needs to start respecting you and not devaluing you because of your age.” DylantotheJ

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10. AITJ For Telling My Friend I Retired Early?

QI

“My husband and I have been saving aggressively and working hard since we were in our 20s and we are both in our early 40s we can retire.

We didn’t pull the trigger for a while but now the time seems right so we quit our jobs and I walk dogs occasionally for fun and extra income and mostly garden and hike in my free time and he is working on personal app development projects.

A few months ago we were hanging out with friends and I mentioned I had quit my job and one of my old friends asked me why and I told her I had enough saved and I’m going to be doing more things I actually want to do (like walk dogs).

She said good for you but in a really weird way and started ignoring me in favor of talking to everyone else. After that, if I wanted to go shopping or something and would invite her she would say she was busy and I was confused because she is always up to do girl’s night at least.

Finally, she called me after I sent her a text asking if she wanted to get coffee telling me we didn’t have anything in common anymore now that my life was “perfect”. The only thing I’d mentioned about my life was that I could save enough to walk dogs and she knew it was my goal for years.

She never seemed to care when I told her my goal was to save and retire early. We were coworkers from my first job and we ended up leaving around the same time and stayed friends.

AITJ for telling my friend I had quit my job?”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. However the way people treat you will change especially those who were friends with you before and chose to spend more when you saved. It sucks but you will find people like that. Congratulations it’s amazing what a little bit of deferred consumption can do for you.

Hopefully, you have enough to weather the current inflation/market contraction which is about the worst time to retire into. The concept of saving 50% of your income and then being free is something everyone who makes above median income should be doing. Even if you don’t retire the freedom to decide one day you don’t want to go to work is freeing.

I hope to join you in about 5 years.” GWeb1920

Another User Comments:

“Your friend is treating you with spite fueled by envy. True success is not measured by how much money you have. True success means having control of every second of your own time.

I’m glad you and hubby were wise enough to understand that and strive for that goal early on. Only, most people (even the ones who make it a goal) will never get to where you and hubby are now. You have succeeded, which reminds people around you of their own failings.

Your friend is still having her time controlled somehow, usually by a person called “boss”. No, she can’t hang out with you. It’s too painful for her. You remind her that her own life sucks. Now, it’s possible to have a career AND to have a good life.

But not having any job at all is the end goal. I love it when employers (I’m not quite retired yet, but close) ask me to write out my career improvement goals. My only goal is to end my career. I am brutally honest about that.

Forgot to add… NTJ.” DistrictEquivalent79

Another User Comments:

“NTJ she isn’t your friend, a friend is someone who cheers you on and celebrates your victories with you. I really want you to focus on what she said. “Now that your life is perfect, you have nothing in common.” To me that sounds more like “Now that you don’t make me feel better about myself and how bad my life is, I no longer want you around because instead of making me feel good about myself you make me envious.” Sounds to me like the trash took itself out.” Party_Dragonfly13

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9. AITJ For Being Angry About How My Grandparents Handled My Mother's Funeral Arrangements?

QI

“My mother (f46) suddenly passed away a week ago.

(She had multiple strokes at once and it completely blindsided my family.) I (f23) legally am her heir as the only adult child, and therefore am taking care of her affairs.

We go and visit her father and stepmother 1-2 times a year for a few days; they live about 4 hours away from us.

They chose not to come to the hospital on the day we took her off life support, and the next day called my father (common law marriage) to let him know that they decided to throw their own funeral in the town she grew up in, even though she hasn’t lived there for 25 years, so their side of the family wouldn’t be “inconvenienced”.

They heavily implied they didn’t want my father to attend. When we explained that the date they chose coincided with the play that my mother had really wanted my younger sister to do, they asked if we could miss or reschedule it. When we explained that we had made plans for a service on the 21st, they said that my cousin’s graduation was that day and that they wouldn’t be attending.

They did not ask about any of this at all and gave us a week’s notice. This was also after our own group conversation about how my mother didn’t want a traditional religious service.

Today they, without asking any of us, put up her obituary online.

They used a high school picture from the 90s and at the very bottom of it said that donations can be made to the caretaking center for my mentally disabled aunt in the city they live in. This is knowing that my family has set up a GoFundMe to help with our own expenses because we were in no way prepared and my 2 siblings are in middle/high school.

I know for certain that they know because they texted my father “hey good to see your GoFundMe is going well.”

I’m too tired and stressed to even process if I have a right to be mad about any of this; my grandfather hasn’t texted me once about any of this.”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. You have every right to be mad about this. After marriage, it’s the husband and kids’ job to prepare a funeral for their spouse/parents, not the grandparents. The fact that they are going behind your father’s back about it even… and then they have the audacity to put a donation to your aunt thing at the end?

I know it’s her father, but she was your MOTHER and your father’s WIFE. Put your foot down and prepare it how your mom wanted it!” Kirin2013

Another User Comments:

“WAIT A MINUTE …..did they put the obituary on the funeral home website OR newspaper?

You can’t do anything with the newspaper BUT, if you paid for the funeral, YOU CONTACT the funeral home and tell them to take her obituary down, NOW. Make sure you have your own obituary written and put that in along with a picture you chose.

Btw I work at a funeral home and we have to play Solomon all the time. YOU, not her dad is the next of kin. If he’s not paying the funeral bill YOU TAKE OVER.” No-Razzmatazz537

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. immovable, indestructible object NTJ. If your mother died without a will (intestate), as many middle-aged people do, you need to check what the rules are in your jurisdiction online and crosscheck with a local lawyer.

Then get whatever process started ASAP, even though your pain is still raw. E.g. in Virginia, if your name isn’t on the car/house and she died intestate, you can’t use her property… Check with a local lawyer for what you need to do and include the existence of your father and his common law marriage.

If she is intestate and her estate is small and you live in e.g. Maryland, then a $750 flat fee is about the going rate for the lawyer to handle the probate process, but you may have to pay for the creditor notices in a local or regional (obscure) paper if those are required (but the lawyer should place them and forward the bill).

You’ll also have to pay the creditors who come forward and next year if you’re American you’ll have to file her income tax. The death notice may have cost your family money to have put in the paper. Larger papers, e.g. Washington Post, can cost upwards of $500, especially if you send a color photo and don’t tell them to make it greyscale.

There is probably nothing stopping you from placing your own death notice in both her hometown and your hometown paper. If it will make you feel better, then call the paper and ask about it. You are stronger than you think.” zero_cool_crash

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8. AITJ For Using Different Colored Hangers For My Kids' Clothes?

QI

“Ever since my kids were around 4 or 5 I’ve used blue/white/black/green/clear clothes hangers for my son’s clothes and red/pink/maroon for my daughter’s clothes. I do this for a few reasons. Mainly so that they don’t get their school clothes mixed up since they have to wear uniforms. I also do it so that when my wife and I are organizing and or cleaning their closet we can easily sort clothes.

It also helps when we give away clothes they’ve outgrown.

Recently, however, my daughter has begun asking why her hangers are different colors than her brother’s. I explained it to her but she insisted that it was rude to give her a certain color hanger because she was a girl.

I tried to explain that it made things easier for everyone, but she insisted we change the clothes hanger ‘situation.’ She wants us to instead use a random assortment of hanger colors for each of their clothes and just put her clothes on one side of the closet and her brother’s on the other.

But with the way the closet is designed, it’s not very practical or easy. She still insists, though, that something has to be done. I tried to explain that to her as well as that it really wasn’t a big deal, but that made her angry with me.

My wife is indifferent on the matter and has left it to me and my daughter to work something out.

Am I the jerk and will I be the jerk if I continue to do this despite my daughter not wanting me to?”

Another User Comments:

“Get your kids together, have all the available hanger colors out in front of you. Flip a coin for who gets to go first, then, in turn, they select one color they want as “theirs” until you have the new designated color coding. Make a list for yourself so you can remember since you won’t be able to rely on stereotypical “boy/girl” colors anymore to keep their clothing separate.

Simple. YTJ if you don’t adjust.” ParsimoniousSalad

Another User Comments:

“YTJ – Your daughter (and your son) are the ones that share the closet. Your daughter says she does not want this. If…”I tried to explain…it really wasn’t a big deal.” Then why is it a big deal to you?

Unless there is a spectrum issue where your son cannot handle a color change, this should be a NON-issue, one that defaults to the preference of the people using the closet. Not you – your daughter and your son. I find it incredibly hard to believe that you would go in the closet of kids old enough to have opinions and throw things away based solely on hanger color, without consulting those kids.

If you do that, well, that’s another thing you are the jerk. For Pete’s sake, they are not infants anymore — start teaching them things, rather than dictating things, or you are going to have much bigger issues down the road.” JudgeJudAITJ

Another User Comments:

“INFO: I feel like it’s important to know how old the kids are now. Obviously, they aren’t preschoolers anymore, a preschooler probably wouldn’t even notice hanger colors. So obviously she is past that age far enough that she not only notices but has an issue with it.

If that’s the case, she is probably old enough to be hanging and organizing her clothes herself- even if Mom and Dad are still washing them for her. I might just offer her a compromise. If she wants to start hanging and organizing her clothes herself, she can do it however she wants to.

But as long as you are doing it for her (assuming she is old enough to be capable of doing it herself) you are going to continue doing it the way that is easiest for you.” _AGirlADogAndAJeep_

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7. AITJ For Blaming My Mom For Stopping My Ballet Lessons As A Child?

QI

“I did ballet as a kid. It started as just the regular fun stuff you do after school, prancing around being fairy princesses and all that junk.

Only sometime later, the teacher recommended to my parents that I attend more serious dance classes, so my mother enrolled me in Saturday classes at a local dance center. I was GOOD at ballet, I got excellent grades in exams, I was loving it.

Only, when I was 10, the dance lessons just stopped. No one told me anything so I didn’t find out why until years later – because my body was changing.

As time went on, I resented this more and more because I was legitimately good at dancing and really liked it but that apparently meant nothing to her.

I didn’t get the chance to start dancing again until I was 18. Now I’ve been in my university dance club for the last three years.

I attend six classes a week and I give my all every single time because I genuinely want to get good. Only, I’d lost everything. My technique, style, and grace had all gone and I had to start building it from the ground up, but that’s so much harder at 18.

Recently, I tried to choreograph my own dance and put everything into it, only to be crushed at the way I looked doing it. My technique was so sloppy I looked like I was intoxicated and I felt delusional.

That night at uni, I called my mother and confronted her.

I demanded to know how my dancing had meant so little to her and why she hadn’t even TOLD me or asked for my input all those years ago. She got angry that I was upset at this when I had a degree to focus on, and wouldn’t answer or apologize at all when I pointed out that she didn’t ask or tell me anything about canceling my dance lessons.

Later that same night, my dad called me and I told him what happened. For the first time in years, I cried actual, heaving, sobbing tears. I told him how l felt like the life I wanted had been denied, how me being really good at something I loved and was achieving in had meant so little to my mother, and how at this point I’m unlikely to get it back.

My dad asked what I wanted from him and my mother. I wanted an apology, for her to acknowledge that what she did wasn’t right, so I could have some peace. I said that to Dad and he said he would have a word with her, but I heard nothing back.

My mother won’t apologize because she did what she thought was right at the time BUT IT WASN’T. I don’t see how she could’ve thought it WAS the right thing. Yeah, I was getting teased about my body but those were coming WAY more from my school friends than my dance friends.

Also, dance has a ton of benefits – every dancer worth their salt has danced through puberty and it HELPS their changing body.

On the other hand, I know that being a bad dancer isn’t the worst thing, and parents aren’t perfect and can’t see the future.

The fact that this reduced me to an uncontrollable sobbing breakdown makes me feel like a child throwing a tantrum. And yeah, it was over ten years ago, but I’m the one still paying the price.

AITJ here?”

Another User Comments:

“Inclined to lean towards no jerks here.

Parents make mistakes and it can be really hard to face the truth that your well-intentioned mistake cost your child something they feel they missed out on. I’d bet dollars to donuts that she’s been thinking about what you’ve said a lot and is trying to face that reality in her own way.

From what you wrote, it doesn’t sound like you fought it all too hard when lessons stopped – and what child doesn’t want to have fewer obligations? At that point, your mom probably thought she made the right choice. It sucks that the choices our parents make will affect us in our adult lives, but that’s just the way things work out.

There are a thousand other adults who had a great potential for dancing and their parents never even gave them the chance to foster that interest in the first place. We can’t change the past, we can only work on who we want to be with what we can control.

You might never be a dancing prodigy, but you can still be good at dance. You’ll probably have to work harder at it, but if it’s something you really want you can still achieve it. Don’t squander your present by lamenting the past or you’ll only get more bitter as time passes.

Being upset is valid, venting to your mom is okay, just try to remember that she didn’t make this choice maliciously. She’s just human like you.” AmnesiA_sc

Another User Comments:

“YTJ. I hate the phrase that life isn’t always fair, but plenty of children have extracurricular activities canceled as children for financial reasons.

It doesn’t ruin their lives. You’re only 18, you’re still young, if this is really something you’re passionate about, you’ll stick it out and make up for lost time. You may never be a professional, but there was no guarantee you would have been, even with all the childhood training in the world.

You should dance because it brings you joy, not because you’re the best at it. It’s okay to have feelings about the choices your parents made for you over the years, but it’s immature for you to throw a tantrum over things that aren’t actually neglectful or abusive in any manner.

Parents are humans doing their best. Sometimes they make the wrong call. You’re not doing anything emotionally productive for yourself by leaning into the feeling that when something isn’t ideal in your life there must be someone to assign blame to for it it.

You’re not entitled to an apology for everything.” Mayalestrange

Another User Comments:

“YTJ. First, no one is a good dancer at 10. If you were a prodigy, the teacher would have let your parents know. So in reality, you were having fun, but maybe as your body changed you looked awkward and out of place with the other 10-year-olds.

Did you practice every day? Did you ask for more lessons? Or are you now looking back and wishing, remembering a passion you never really had? Second, lessons cost money. When you factor in shoes and leotards and whatever else, that becomes expensive. And for a parent, time-consuming.

Driving to the lessons, hanging around, driving home. Not to mention the pure and agonizing torment of recitals. Third, as a parent, you try a bunch of things. Swimming, softball, gymnastics, violin, theater, you throw a bunch against the wall and you see what sticks.

Both for your kids and you. A family is not obligated to be centered around a 10-year-old. Being sobbingly angry a decade later is beyond childish. Your parents did what they thought was right. You aren’t paying a price. It is the epitome of selfishness you are displaying right now.

Apologize to your parents and honestly, grow up.” whiporee123

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6. AITJ For Wanting To Rehome Our Dog Despite My Husband's Objections?

QI

“My husband (M32) and I (F27) adopted an adult dog in June. She’s so small and sweet. We were told that she was house-trained, but quickly found out that she is not. We have tried to house-train her for several months, but she continues to pee in our apartment.

Honestly, I have made more of an effort to take her on walks than my husband, even though he has been staying at home (basically unemployed) and I am an essential worker. She came from a southern state and refuses to go outside when it is cold.

We tried getting puppy pads for our apartment, but she consistently misses the mat and pees on the floor. This is frustrating for me because I’ll come home from the hospital to find my husband cuddling with her on the couch and the smell of urine and poop on the floor because he hasn’t cleaned up her mess, so I am consistently the one to clean it.

He is also in the National Guard and has to be away for a few days to a few months at a time, so I am often her only parent.

Things became more complicated when I found out that (1) I am pregnant (which was a surprise because he said he was infertile but baby is wanted) and (2) We are moving north to a state that can be much colder and snowier.

My husband was able to find a work-from-home job that he will start soon, so he can stay with the baby. My mom (F72) will stay with us for her first 2 months. He will also be away for the military while the baby is 2-3 months old.

I am already worried that I will be overwhelmed with recovering from birth and caring for a baby while working my intern year as a physician at my dream institution. I am worried that the responsibilities of caring for our dog will continue to fall on me.

My husband keeps promising that he will train her, but he had months at home with her in the summer, and that didn’t happen. Even if he did train her, she wouldn’t want to go for walks in the cold. My worst fear is that baby will start crawling around wintertime while I will be away at work and leave the baby with my husband, our dog will pee and poop on the floor, my husband won’t clean it, and the baby will crawl/roll into it or even ingest it.

I have asked my husband for months if we could rehome our dog, but he doesn’t want to. We got her after he returned from a deployment and was having trouble readjusting to home life, and he has really bonded with her. He says I am being irresponsible and not following through with my commitment to her.

She really is the sweetest, happiest, cuddliest dog, and it hurts me to feel like we would be letting her down. Baby is coming and we are moving in a little over a month, he is away again for the month, and while I want to give this more time, I am feeling a lot of pressure to make this decision now before we commit to adding her to our lease for $100/mo.

WIBTJ if I find her a new home?”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. You have too much on your plate. My biggest concern is that your husband is a ball and chain. Staying home is not the problem. Indifference to animal messes is a red flag, and people who can ignore something as urgent as poop or urine on the floor, are also capable of denying other obvious calls to action.

He’s accusing you of being irresponsible and not following through on your commitment to the dog? That’s straight-up gaslighting — he’s irresponsible, he’s not taking care of her, he’s projecting his garbage onto you. He said he was sterile but you got pregnant…. Hmmm. I think he lied about sterility in order to tie you down and your doctor’s income.

Good luck. The dog is just a symptom.” Johoski

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. Hi, fellow milspouse here (active duty), and after delivering my 3rd kid during a deployment I can 100% tell you that you’re not obligated to pile on more than you can handle.

He needs to step up and do his part or kindly find the dog a new home where time and attention can be dedicated to training and dog ownership. Something he’s not even currently attempting despite being home with said dog all day. It sounds like you’re already busy with your intern year, baby on the way, husband in the National Guard… your mental health is too precious.

The husbands (or spouses) tend to forget that while they’re away WE have to do all the things! So any shared responsibility isn’t shared for the duration they’ll be gone and we become single parents until they get back. Mine keeps saying our dog (also an adult adoptee—fortunately well-trained) needs a play buddy.

Uhm. Excuse me sir? No, he does not, but I NEED my sanity, and one more thing will do me in. 3 kids + 1 dog + work = plenty of stuff for me to do.” M-o-A-Bs0961

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. Your husband is not following through with HIS commitments regarding the dog.

You definitely need to point that out, and STOP cleaning up after the dog. LET. HIM. DO. IT. No matter how long it takes. Don’t ignore it, just point it out and tell him it is his responsibility. As far as the baby coming, you do need to understand that most husbands don’t “get it” about baby safety until the baby actually arrives and they can see the reality.

It is going to be many months from now before your child will be rolling around on the floor. If the dog is still having problems, it will have to be crated or put in another room to keep the baby safe. Speaking of which, do you have a crate?

I know it sounds cruel, but dogs are fine with it as long as it’s routine. If she is crated with the puppy pads, at least it will be easier to clean up.” 1962Michael

0 points (0 votes)
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5. AITJ For Telling A Customer's Child To Stay Out Of The Kitchen And Responding To Her Criticism?

QI

“I (17f) work as an apprentice at a nursery part-time, and I also work at a local café. This particular day I was working at the café scooping ice cream. The way the café is set up is that there’s a divider between the kitchen and rooms, but the divider is almost never up because people are always walking in and out serving, but still there’s a line on the floor that the public does not cross.

This middle-aged lady and her toddler walk in and demand ice cream. The ice cream freezer is right next to the divider but still in the kitchen and as I’m scooping I notice that the toddler is at my leg panting on the glass. I look over and the mum is doing nothing so I stop, bend to her level, and say something along the lines of “Sweetheart, you can’t be back here it’s not safe, why don’t you go wait with mummy, I’ll have your ice cream out soon”.

The toddler smiles at me and goes back to her mum, who’s glaring daggers at me.

When I finish and start ringing them up the mum huffs and puffs about me “taking too long” and “how dare I speak to her child that way” and where I get the audacity to tell off her kid.

I explained that I didn’t want the toddler to get hurt and I work with children so felt I could handle the situation, and apologized if I overstepped. She looks me up and down and says, “YOU work with children? You’re a child yourself!” Here’s where I may be the jerk but I was so tired of this that I said “Ma’am that’s the most common comment I get, if you’re going to make a point, be more original.” She made a puffy pout and stormed out with her child.

My manager thought it was funny but I’m wondering if I’m the jerk here.”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. She was entitled, rude, and you did nothing wrong. Not for nothing, though: why would an observation being common make it any less valid? Like, I’m not sure why you thought that was a good comeback.” StAlvis

Another User Comments:

“NTJ…I had a preteen do a cartwheel in a retail store I owned near one of our large glass display tables. The mom was in the opposite direction. The girl looked at me and did it, like she knew she shouldn’t have.

I instantly said, “oh no, please don’t do that in here.” I even rewatched the video to ensure I wasn’t too sharp in how I said it. The mom glared at me, collected her child, and walked instantly to her car with her….as she was walking out, she gave her a pat on the head like “there, there” for the mean retail lady asking her to not do something.

It was just so bizarre. I have a daughter, and if she did that and was asked to stop, I would have backed up the worker.” EstablishmentFun289

Another User Comments:

“NTJ, what good mother doesn’t keep her kid from disturbing the employees in areas they shouldn’t be in in the first place?

If she didn’t want you saying anything she should have stepped in. Her reply was ironic: you can’t fault a seventeen-year-old for being a child when that child is doing better parenting in that situation than the actual adult. Which is probably the route I would have taken instead of the one you gave.

Your reply was all considered very mild.” First-Industry4762

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4. AITJ For Not Asking My Father's Young Partner To Be A Bridesmaid?

QI

“I (29F) didn’t grow up in the best family situation. My father (65M) left when I was born and dropped contact. My mother (64F) has been a huge supporter, especially when I came out. My father recently contacted me wanting to reconcile and to introduce his new partner (27F).

I was shocked that my father was seeing someone young. He supports my relationship with my fiance (30F) and I will be supportive of him. I have reached out to his partner to get to know her better, but she does not want to be part of the family.

She did meet some of the family at a gathering and was very cold and rude towards everyone.

The wedding is scheduled for May and one of my bridesmaids had to drop out due to a family emergency. My father suggested asking his partner to be a bridesmaid.

I did consider the idea until she started talking about changing the dresses and changing my friends for hers. I asked one of my sister’s friends if they wanted to be one and they accepted.

My father contacted me upset that I asked a stranger to be a bridesmaid than his partner.

I explained to him that his partner is a stranger to me. He got defensive and thinks that I should have been more considerate. He and his partner might not come to the wedding.

AITJ for not asking my father’s partner to be a bridesmaid?”

Another User Comments:

“”When being a bridesmaid was on the table, she made demands of me to change the dresses and to replace my friends with her friends as bridesmaids. Your partner has made it very clear that she does not want to make friends with me, and that including her will make me have to do things her way, even at my own wedding.

You will not bring this up with me again, or I shall have to reconsider how little regard you have for me.” NTJ.” Aether-Wind

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. Even without all the baggage, you get to choose your bridesmaids and your father would have been out of line to press the issue.

In this particular case, your father is off his rocker to think it’s appropriate for the younger than you partner ….that you barely know….that has been distant and rude…to have any role in your wedding, especially after she made the outrageous decision to suggest changing the dresses and including her friends in your bridal party.

I would tell him she cannot attend at all, just to avoid the (justifiably) scandalized reaction to his sudden reappearance with a woman significantly less than half his age. Your mother deserves better than to spend your wedding day (and probably weeks after) dealing with the inevitable storm of gossip this situation will inspire, and so do you.

Based on the behavior she’s already displayed, I don’t trust her not to create more of a scene than her mere existence will already cause. If he chooses not to attend, that’s probably for the best.” rapt2right

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. She tried to make it about her when it’s supposed to be about you and your fiance.

Not only that but he’s never been in your life until now AND he’s seeing someone younger than you. That’s all kinds of gross. He needs to work on building a relationship with you first before trying to shove his younger-than-my-offspring partner on you.” [deleted]

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3. AITJ For Getting My Boss In Trouble For Helping Others At Work?

QI

“2 weeks ago, I (19F) was walking to work when I noticed an elderly male pushing his wheelchair.

He was walking extremely slow and it was super hot. I asked him where he was going and he said admissions.

INFO: I work at an amusement park, a shop all the way in the back and he wanted to go to admissions (all the way in the front).

I asked him if he would like my help and he gladly agreed so he sat down and I took him to admissions in 8 minutes. I then went to work but I was 15 minutes late and my boss scolded me. When I told her why I was late she said I was a chef and chefs don’t deal with people, only food, and accused me of lying.

Even after the elderly man’s family found me and thanked me, she didn’t apologize but scolded me more for leaving the kitchen so they could say thanks.

INFO: When I was 16 and a cashier, my boss got in pretty big trouble because some of the other cashiers caught her on camera saying she didn’t want to work/she didn’t care when asked for help.

Almost all the employees have changed since then except me so I think she holds a grudge even though I was uninvolved.

Yesterday I was going to work when a higher-up asked me for assistance with some lost kids. I told him that my boss would scold me and when he tried to convince me, I told him the story.

I ended up helping and my boss is in trouble again.

Some coworkers say NTJ because I was truthful and some say YTJ because this could get her fired and I knew it could. AITJ?”

Another User Comments:

“I had something similar happen when an older woman stopped me in the parking lot of the place I work.

She was looking for the social security office that had moved fifteen years ago. I explained where to go and how to get there. When I went inside the building I was told I was late and was docked a half hour. I told the manager what had happened but she said I should have come inside the building and leave the patron in the parking lot.

I was upset to say the least and informed said manager if that was how we as employees were supposed to treat the public then if I came into work the next day and saw a (her) body laying in the lot, then I would step over the (her) body and check in inside the building first. I heard back from HR later that day and was told that I wouldn’t be docked the half hour.

Sometimes management needs to be put in their lane.” Alive_Room6023

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. What did your friends expect you to do? Your options were help your higher-up find the kids and then get scolded by your boss, or tell him why you couldn’t help.

Or did they expect you to come up with a worse excuse to not help a dude who outranks your boss with lost children? Last I checked, customer oriented jobs kind of frown on stuff like that. Even if you weren’t a kind person, you wouldn’t be the jerk, you handled it the only way you could.” Mamboshi-chicky-yeah

Another User Comments:

“NTJ at all. I am old enough to say this. You have to get respect to get respect. I have taught my children this. A teacher asked me how I got my child to look at me and listen to me. I looked her dead in the eyes and said “You are not respectful when you address him.

He will never respect you. You haven’t earned it.” Not everyone your children come into contact with that are teachers, counselors, or otherwise in charge, should be respected. Adults, no matter how old, should always show respect to younger people. It sets a positive tone.” OperationBright2450

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2. AITJ For Yelling At My Partner For Mansplaining How To Open Our Stuck Bathroom Door?

QI

“My (F27) partner (M25) keeps explaining stuff to me in a condescending way, I always get mad at him but he keeps saying it’s not condescending, he’s just kindly explaining.

Today I went off on him because the bathroom’s door handle always gets stuck and today it took me 40 min to open the door so I told him not to close that door anymore and he “explained” to me that it gets stuck and that I only have to turn it the other way and when I said I did it, he said I have to do it harder, he did not see me fighting the door.

Now, we’ve been living in this house for a month so I already know the stupid door knob gets stuck and which way to turn it, it wasn’t that, I tried everything, I told him that and he insisted I wasn’t doing it right.

He always makes me feel like he thinks I’m stupid and I hate it so I yelled at him that I already know how to open the door and he got mad at me for yelling.

AITJ?”

Another User Comments:

“Something’s not quite right here.

If he’s constantly closing the bathroom door, then presumably he’s regularly opening it again, too. I’m guessing it doesn’t take him 40 minutes to get in every time otherwise he’d also give up closing the door. You say it’s mansplaining, but…well, he can open the door and you can’t.

It’s kind of hard to say he’s being obnoxious and condescending because you know how to open the door, yet you spent 40 minutes not being able to open it. Perhaps you picked a bad example to prove his mansplaining. As people have said below, part of mansplaining requires a man to be talking down to a woman about a subject she’s just as, or more qualified in than him.

But in this case, he literally can do something that you can’t. Perhaps this is a case of him mansplaining other things in the past and this particular argument not really fitting the bill, but essentially being the straw that broke the camel’s back. In this particular case, you really just need to get the door fixed. Personally, I don’t like bathroom doors left open, either.

Kinda the same as not leaving the toilet seat lid up.” BurdenedMind79

Another User Comments:

“YTJ, at least based on the information you gave. You couldn’t open the door, partner told you how to open it. Now, everyone will jump in and say “but OP already knows how to open the door!” emm well obviously not if it took her forty minutes to do so!

Your request to leave the door open is obviously not a reasonable one, it’s a bathroom door and people value their privacy. If your partner is mansplaining to you then he would be the jerk, however the example you gave doesn’t reflect this.” DrZaiu5

Another User Comments:

“Everyone’s a jerk. I don’t think he’s mansplaining, he’s being a condescending jerk–he knows it gets stuck & you know it gets stuck. After a month, you two haven’t fixed the problem, you’ve decided to live with it. He was condescending because he turns it the other way hard and it works for him.

For whatever reason, it’s not working for you, maybe he’s leaving a step out, maybe something within the knob just changed because of all of the hard turning. He didn’t see you struggle for 40 minutes, which sounds like an exaggeration, to be honest. If I were stuck for 10 minutes and couldn’t get out I would either fix the freakin’ knob, take it off, or call someone in to repair it.

Why is this something neither of you can fix? I have zero knowledge of doing things like this have have swapped out a doorknob with no experience. Everyone’s a jerk because neither of you is doing anything about a $20 problem.” ghettoblaster78

0 points (0 votes)
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1. AITJ For Not Wanting To Spend $10,000 On My MIL's Dream Birthday Cruise?

QI

“My MIL who will be turning 70 wants her birthday present to be a cruise with all her grandchildren. I do not want to do it, because a cruise would be very expensive due to the fact my wife and I have 4 children.

None of us are by any means wealthy, but I’ve managed to keep us out of credit card debt and have a modest amount of savings. It’s not going to break us, but I feel like it would be a huge setback in terms of savings.

My wife thinks I’m being selfish for not wanting to help fulfill my MIL’s long-time dream. Am I the jerk for not wanting to spend about $10,000 on a four-day cruise in order to take my family along on my MIL’s “dream vacation”?”

Another User Comments:

“NTJ. It’s just not a good idea, my nephew’s dream is to marry in Cancun, he is getting married next February, my dream is to not spend a good chunk of change or vacation days to attend his wedding. Sorry if your MIL has been dreaming of this trip for a while, She must have saved to pay for it, otherwise is just a silly idea.

Your wife wants to fulfill her mom’s wish, great! Better start working to pay for it.” YakLongjumping9478

Another User Comments:

“I’m probably going against the majority here – but no jerks here – leaning towards a soft YTJ. Doesn’t your wife get a say over how you spend your money?

And if these people have been kind and generous to you as you mentioned and helped you out, it may make for wonderful memories for everyone. I don’t know your finances but in 5 years that 10k may not matter as much as the memories you made.

It’s a decision you need to reach as a couple after looking over your finances together. And maybe talk to your MIL and let her know the dilemma. Maybe find a cheaper vacation who knows but unilaterally deciding isn’t a great look… or a great idea.

Notice the language you’re using “I…. Bring MY family”…” Gullible-String-4616

Another User Comments:

“YTJ- why would you deprive your family of a great vacation and lifelong family memories if you can afford it? When is this cruise scheduled for? Do you have time to save up for it?

This sounds more like your dislike for your mother-in-law than it is about anything else.” DafuqDidIJustRead

-1 points (1 vote(s))
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Sometimes it's obvious, other times it's not! You be the judge about who's the jerk! Upvote, downvote, and comment on your favorite stories by signing up for a Metaspoon account. Click Log In at the top right corner of this page to get started. (Note: Some stories have been shortened and modified for our audiences)