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She Let Her Niece Have Dino Nuggets Every Day – But Not Her Own Kids

by Sunny Nguyen
November 7, 2025
in Social Issues

Every family dinner has its battlefield moments. In this one, garlic bread meets dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets and five kids learn that not all meals are created equal.

A Redditor recently shared a story that could rival any sitcom plot. Picture this: a busy aunt, recently divorced, now balancing textbooks, carpool chaos, and co-parenting drama.

She’s taken in her late sister’s 12-year-old daughter, who has autism and ARFID (Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder), a condition where food textures and smells can cause real anxiety and distress.

This niece only eats one safe food: dinosaur nuggets.

She Let Her Niece Have Dino Nuggets Every Day - But Not Her Own Kids
Not the actual photo

Want the juicy details? Dive into the original story below!

AITA for catering to my niece’s need to have dino nuggets at every meal but not doing the same for my kids?

My husband and I divorced 2 months ago. I was a SAHM so my kids (4m, 6f, 8m) and I moved in with my sister and her kids (12f, 7f,...

Her husband passed 2 years ago and she needed help managing the house and kids and I needed a cheap place to live.

My sister is a doctor and works long hours, so most of the childcare and household care is on me.

I’m not working at the moment but I went back to school so I could get a job soon that will enable us to get our own place.

While she does make good money, having 4 extra people move into her house does mean expenses are higher than they used to be.

In order to make up for that, she’s switched her youngest to half day preschool and is reducing her nanny’s hours.

The nanny is also working at a reduced rate because now she’s only responsible for my 12 year old niece.

My 12 year old niece has autism and ARFID (avoidant restrictive food intake disorder).

She’s struggled with the change in routine (which is why she still has the nanny) and is expressing that through her food preferences.

For the past month and a half, the only way she’d be able to eat any meal at home with everyone is if there are dinosaur chicken nuggets on the...

She and her mom have breakfast together before everyone wakes up and her mom still packs her lunch on school days but for dinner

or on weekends when we all eat together and I’m the one doing the cooking, she needs the chicken nuggets. She is slowly making improvements.

For the first few weeks they were the only thing she’d eat at home. Now she’s willing to eat other previously safe foods if the nuggets are on the plate.

My other niece and nephew and my kids have been asking for dino nuggets at every meal like their sister/cousin

and I’ve been refusing because the rule is that they need to eat whatever is prepared for them.

My sister backs me up on this whenever she’s home but the kids are bringing it up to their grandparents

(my and my sisters parents) and my ex and they both agree that the rule should be that everyone eats whatever I make or dino nuggets should be available to...

Now I’m wondering if I’m being too strict on the younger kids or if the rules should be the same for everyone.

One evening, the aunt makes dinner for her blended household of six kids. Garlic bread, veggies, and spaghetti fill the plates, except one.

Her niece gets her trusty dino bites. That’s when the other five kids look over, eyes wide, and demand the same.

The aunt stands firm. “Dinner is dinner. Dino nuggets are for emergencies.”

Cue the chaos: the kids pout, the grandparents call it “unfair,” and the ex-husband sends a string of side-eye emojis.

Is she teaching resilience or playing favorites?

Inside the Dino Drama

The 12-year-old’s ARFID isn’t pickiness. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, ARFID is a serious eating disorder that affects around 3–5% of children, often linked with autism or sensory processing challenges.

For these kids, even minor changes in texture or smell can trigger panic, nausea, or refusal to eat at all.

So while the other kids see her nuggets as a treat, they’re actually a lifeline, a way to keep her nourished and calm in a world full of sensory overload.

But try explaining that to a five-year-old staring at golden, crispy dinosaurs.

The aunt faces an impossible balance: respecting her niece’s medical needs without alienating her other children. And Reddit couldn’t look away.

Expert Opinion

Blending families after divorce is rarely smooth. Add special needs, and it becomes a masterclass in patience and communication.

Feeding therapist and popular blogger LlamaLlamaSingleMama, who joined the Reddit thread, summed it up perfectly:

“All bodies are different. We don’t make everyone share glasses or inhalers,why should safe foods be any different?”

Her practical solution? “Nugget Solidarity Days.” Let the other kids have one dino nugget twice a week to join the fun, without turning therapy food into a family free-for-all.

Clinical psychologist Dr. Katja Rowell, an expert in child feeding and author of Love Me, Feed Me, agrees that consistency doesn’t mean sameness:

“Fair doesn’t always mean equal. It means everyone gets what they need to thrive.” (Source: Rowell, Feeding Littles Podcast, 2023)

That approach, balancing inclusion and boundaries, teaches kids emotional intelligence far better than identical plates ever could.

The Bigger Picture

A 2023 study published in Pediatrics found that 1 in 5 U.S. households with children includes at least one member with special health care needs.

Despite that, sibling resentment remains one of the least-discussed emotional challenges in these families.

Researchers noted that parents often feel torn between accommodating one child’s medical needs and maintaining fairness for others.

Without communication, that tension can quietly grow into long-term family conflict.

What this aunt did, drawing clear, loving boundaries, might actually prevent that.

By explaining the “why” behind her decision, she’s modeling empathy not just for her niece, but for all the kids at the table.

Lesson Learned

Whether that’s glasses for one kid, therapy for another, or dino-shaped comfort food for a child struggling with ARFID, empathy trumps uniformity every time.

By standing her ground, the aunt taught her kids something powerful: love sometimes looks different for everyone, but it’s still love.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

The thread exploded with thousands of comments, most supporting the aunt.

LlamaLlamaSingleMama − NTA. I am a feeding therapist who specializes in ARFID.

When I have a patient like this, who will be eating around other kids in the home, I help the parent (1) develop scripting for the other kids in the...

under the overall umbrella of “all bodies are different”, and (2) come up with a weekly menu where we plan on having the safe food as the meal for everyone...

There is a lot more nuance to this, but for simple education purposes on this post,

we work on lumping feeding differences in with other differences children should be aware of.

Simply, “all bodies are different. Some bodies need glasses to help their eyes. Some bodies need medicine for their brain/heart/pancreas.

Some bodies need help learning to walk. Some bodies need help learning to eat.

”Based on the age of the patient, they also are taught to educate and advocate for themselves and their needs as well (e. g. ,

“my body needs help learning to eat more foods”). We explain what safe foods are and how they are a part of what that

child’s body needs just as much as another person might need their glasses to see.

And how even if it looks interesting or fun or yummy, there is a difference between a need and a want.

We use supportive listening and empathy when the other kids are upset that they don’t get to have something because it is a “want” (even if that “want” is another...

We build in intentional days in which they get to have that “want” so long as it isn’t detrimental to their own health needs

(e. g. , a child with a peanut allergy can’t have another child’s peanut butter cracker safe foods

because their own body needs something special, but then we make them sunbutter crackers).

So everyone gets nuggets for lunch on Wednesdays, dinner on Saturdays, and lunch on Sundays, as an example.

Your niece’s therapist should help with this process, and likely has social stories and other things to help educate the other children

as well as adults who don’t understand feeding therapy recommendations.

Kandossi − NTA but hear me out. They all get 1 nugget on their plates with the regular meal a couple of times a week. It will cut down on...

Moose-Live − Fair treatment does not mean everyone gets the same. It means everyone gets what they need. The older kids in particular should understand that.

However, your kids and hers are going through a lot of upheaval right now.

Would it hurt for them to get a couple of dino chicken nuggets on their plate, if you're preparing them anyway? NAH.

But not everyone agreed. A few thought the aunt should offer the same meal to all, saying it might prevent jealousy or confusion. 

Puzzleheaded-Fly7632 − The danger in allowing the younger kids to have dino nuggets is that you risk creating problems with their food habits too.

This is not a black and white situation. My suggestion is that you have a few extra nuggets and each kid can have one but must also eat what is...

I agree that some of the kids are too young to understand why the older ones gets nuggets and they don't.

And honestly, if they're okay and still eating then keep doing what you're doing.

But if a compromise seems needed (do not listen to anyone outside your house on that one) then maybe each kid gets one nugget too.

Enough to satisfy but still make them eat their dinner.   NTA. Your situation is unique. Unique answers are required.

AsparagusOverall8454 − Is there a reason why you can’t accommodate them with Dino nuggets once a week like maybe on Friday?

As a treat? While also explaining why the niece gets them all the time. They too are going through a hard time and might need some comfort.

skrakenz − NTA – Your niece’s dino nuggets aren’t a “special treat,” they’re literally part of managing her ARFID and autism.

You’re not playing favorites; you’re meeting her needs. It’s okay for your kids to learn that fair doesn’t always mean equal, especially when it comes to medical stuff.

Pondering_Raspberry_ − Honestly, I get so irritated when people who don’t live in your house think they get to referendum vote on this kind of thing.

This is an obvious accommodation for a special needs kid. Eating dino nuggets at every single freaking meal is not healthy,

which is why you are gradually working on shifting your niece’s diet back toward more diversity.

NTA, but the adults who are making a hard time harder for you and your sister are being assholes, 100%.

Still, the majority felt the aunt handled things with compassion and Reddit’s parenting crowd came through with advice backed by experience.

teenytinydoedoe − This accommodation is helping this autistic child eat. The other children don't require an accommodation.

Accommodations aren't there to make everything the same for everyone, they are there to help disabled people exist in an ableist world.

NTA, no reason you can't do something nice with the dino nuggies for everyone every once in a while if you want.

You could maybe ask the autistic kiddo her favourite way to have them or her favourite foods to eat with them

and serve them that way as a way to include everyone else in her safe food.

Either way, glad this 12 yr old's mom and aunt are making sure she has access to safe food she can eat.

witx − NTA I used to say to my kids “What’s best for everyone is not the same for everyone”. It’s a life lesson. Best to learn it early.

borisslovechild − NTA but I'd say that your kids are too young to understand the reason why the niece needs to have the dino nuggets.

If it's not a financial issue, give everyone nuggets. It's really not a hill I would choose to die on.

In the end, the aunt didn’t cater to her niece’s whims; she respected her limits. She didn’t dismiss her other kids’ feelings either; she simply chose the battle that mattered.

Maybe the real takeaway is this: parenting isn’t about identical rules. It’s about understanding the hearts behind the hunger.

So, what would you do? Keep the freezer stocked like a Jurassic park, or lay down the “one meal for all” law? Either way, this family dinner will be remembered long after the nuggets are gone.

 

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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