For many families, shared meals are about more than food, they’re about connection. But what happens when a child’s medical needs don’t align with what’s being served?
One father turned to Reddit to ask if he was wrong for insisting his 9-year-old son, who suffers from Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID), should be included in family dinners with his cousins, even if it meant eating very different food.
The request sparked a heated argument with his sister-in-law, divided his extended family, and left him questioning whether he’d crossed a line.
One dad fights for his son with ARFID to join family meals with his special diet, but his sister-in-law refuses



Family conflicts over food may sound trivial, but they dig into deeper issues of boundaries, empathy, and childhood fairness. ARFID, according to the National Eating Disorders Association, is more than “picky eating”, it’s a serious mental health condition where exposure to unsafe foods can trigger anxiety, trauma, or even physical illness.
Dr. Jennifer Thomas, co-director of the Eating Disorders Clinical and Research Program at Massachusetts General Hospital, notes: “Children with ARFID aren’t being stubborn. Their food avoidance is rooted in fear, sensory differences, or traumatic experiences with eating.” That distinction matters, especially when relatives view it as indulgence rather than treatment.
At the same time, family therapists warn that hosts have the right to set boundaries in their homes.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Ramani Durvasula writes that fairness in family settings often means balancing empathy for one child’s needs with the broader stress placed on others. “If parents feel forced into situations that cause friction, resentment builds and family ties fray,” she explained in a Psychology Today article.
So what’s the middle ground? Experts suggest neutral venues or rotating hosts, allowing the boy’s needs to be accommodated without putting all the burden on one family. Others advise framing the discussion for children: “Yes, your cousin gets McDonald’s, but he doesn’t get pizza, cake, or ice cream like you do.” Reframing the “privilege” as limitation can help kids grasp the reality.
Ultimately, while the dad’s protective instinct is valid, pushing past his sister-in-law’s no may have fueled conflict. Respecting her boundary while seeking alternative ways to include his son, like hosting meals himself, could preserve both inclusion and family peace.
Check out how the community responded:
Many Reddit users claimed OP was the jerk



However, one claimed OP was not the jerk

This group said that on one was wrong in this story


In the end, the family decided not to press the issue and instead host smaller gatherings themselves. While the debate highlighted the challenges of parenting a child with ARFID, it also underscored a bigger truth: balancing inclusion with boundaries isn’t easy.
Was the father wrong for pushing too hard, or was the sister-in-law wrong for excluding her nephew from family meals? Maybe both sides have a point but one thing is clear. For kids with eating disorders, what’s on the plate matters less than who’s sitting beside them.










