A teen at a funeral reception, hungry and hurting from braces, finally grabs soft food only for Grandma to snatch the plate for her new favorite grandkid. The 16-year-old feels the sting of blatant favoritism amid the family’s grief.
Days later, the Redditor unleashes a sharp, petty comeback that embarrasses Grandma in front of everyone. Online folks cheer the clever revenge, debating if it went too far in this tense family showdown.
Granddaughter goes “I forgot you were my grandma” as a payback for her grandma’s behavior.


































Sometimes, your jokes could go a little too far, you end up hurting the ones that you love without being aware of it. As it happened to a grandma and her granddaughter in this Reddit story.
Our teen hero, fresh from graveyard detective duty for Grandma, finally scores a plate of chewable goodies, only for it to vanish into toddler territory. Yet grandma’s quip is a casual “Sorry I forgot you’re my granddaughter.” Cue the record scratch.
Flip the script, though: Grandma’s in early 50s prime, no dementia excuses here, and she’s juggling fresh toddlers who probably rule her world like tiny dictators.
Maybe she saw the kiddo’s puppy eyes and autopilot-kicked in, thinking “family first!” But prioritizing a toddler over a helpful, hurting teen? That’s favoritism with a side of fries, cold ones.
The teen’s retaliation two days later, calling Grandma by first name and echoing the forgetfulness jab, was pure mirror medicine. Satirical? Sure. Disrespectful? Debatable. It landed in front of aunts and grandpas, amplifying the awkwardness even more.
This micro-drama spotlights a macro mess: shifting family dynamics when new babies crash the grandparent party. Suddenly, the “only grandkids” club loses its exclusivity, breeding resentment faster than rabbits.
A 2023 study from the American Psychological Association notes that 68% of adolescents report feeling displaced by younger siblings or cousins, often leading to snarky outbursts as coping mechanisms. It’s not just petty, it’s human.
Relationship expert Dr. John Gottman has found that if partners display contempt toward each other, which commonly includes making sarcastic remarks, their odds of divorce rise dramatically.
Here, the ‘joke’ bombed because it dismissed the teen’s pain; the comeback highlighted that mutual respect isn’t age-gated.
Neutral fix? Grandma could own the favoritism slip with a heartfelt “I messed up, you’re still my girl,” maybe pairing it with a soft-food care package.
Teen apologizes for the public sting, but stands firm on boundaries. Therapy’s overkill, but a family chat over ice cream could rebuild bridges.
Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:
Some assert the grandmother’s comment was rude and deserved the comeback.







Others emphasize respect is mutual and not age-based.








Many question the grandmother’s confusing apology for its logic.









Do you think the teen’s ultimatum was fair given the lifelong grandma bond at stake, or did they overplay their hand with an audience?
How would you juggle being the “forgotten” sibling’s keeper in this mess? Share your hot takes ,we’re all ears!





