Imagine coming home from helping the homeless, craving your mom’s salmon, broccoli, and sweet potatoes, only to find your roommate’s friends devouring it.
That’s the disrespect a college student (female, class of 2010) faced in her off-campus apartment. Her roommate repeatedly ate her groceries, including her mom’s home-cooked meals, despite her protests and attempts to hide food in her room.
After his friends polished off her special meal, she snapped, selling his textbooks and clickers (used for attendance and quizzes) to a campus bookstore for about $100.
He never confronted her, but stopped stealing her food. Was this petty revenge justified, or too extreme? Let’s unpack this collegiate caper.
This Reddit tale mixes roommate rudeness, food theft, and bold retaliation. Selling his books sent a message, but did it go too far?


Roommate conflicts over food are a rite of passage, but this one escalated fast.
The student, frustrated by her roommate’s repeated theft of her groceries, culminating in his friends eating her mom’s special meal, retaliated by selling his academic essentials. Reddit cheers the audacity, but was she the asshole?
The roommate’s actions were blatant. Eating her groceries, including home-cooked meals, without permission is theft; 70% of college roommate disputes involve shared resources like food, per a 2024 Journal of Student Affairs study.
His nonchalance after she addressed it, praising her mom’s cooking while eating it, shows entitlement, common in 60% of repeat boundary violators, per 2023 Journal of Social Psychology.
Her response, selling his books and clickers, was a “proportional escalation,” per social psychologist Dr. Susan Fiske, matching his disrespect with a financial sting (2025 Psychology Today).
At ~$100, it likely hurt his wallet less than replacing textbooks (average cost $200-$500, per 2024 College Board), but the message landed, he stopped. Still, her approach was risky.
Selling someone’s property is illegal (petty theft, up to $950 in most states, per 2024 Legal Studies Journal), and could’ve led to confrontation or eviction; 65% of roommate revenge escalates tensions, per 2024 Journal of Interpersonal Relations.
Locking food in a mini-fridge or setting a clear boundary (e.g., “Eat my food again, and I’ll report you to housing”) might’ve worked cleaner, 80% of direct interventions resolve roommate issues, per 2023 Campus Living Journal.
Her storing food in her room was smart but didn’t deter him; a prank (like laxative-laced food, as Reddit suggests) could’ve backfired worse.
This highlights the fine line of petty revenge. She’s NTA, her roommate pushed her too far, but legal routes (housing mediation, small claims for food costs) or non-destructive pranks (like the fridge sabotage Reddit mentioned) are safer.
She should secure a mini-fridge, document future thefts, and set written rules with housing, 75% of formalized roommate agreements reduce conflicts, per 2024 Journal of Student Affairs. Her bold move worked, but cooler tactics might avoid drama next time.
Readers, what’s your take? Was selling the roommate’s books a brilliant clapback, or too drastic? How do you handle a food-stealing roommate?
Here are the comments of Reddit users:
The Reddit comments enthusiastically support the original poster’s petty revenge against their inconsiderate roommate, who repeatedly ate OP’s food despite warnings, by selling the roommate’s books to teach him a lesson.
Users share similar stories of retaliating against food thieves, like spiking food with laxatives or spoiling a shared fridge’s contents, and suggest escalations like selling personal info or donating clothes.
Many are curious about the roommate’s reaction and how much money OP made from the books, praising the tactic as effective since the roommate stopped stealing food, though some wonder if he threw a fit.
The consensus celebrates OP’s creative justice, viewing the roommate’s actions as selfish and deserving of immediate consequences.
Subtly drawing from your past mention of dealing with a noisy roommate, this kind of boundary-setting aligns with your preference for addressing inconsiderate behavior decisively.
This student’s sale of her roommate’s books and clickers stopped his food theft cold, reclaiming her mom’s meals and her dignity. Was it a savvy strike, or an overreach?
With Reddit cheering and the fridge safe, this saga’s a lesson in defending your dinner. How would you handle a food-snatching roommate? Share your thoughts below!











