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Worker Stops Chronic Potluck Freeloader With One Savage Cheesecake Move

by Charles Butler
November 24, 2025
in Social Issues

A workplace potluck turned into a full-on showdown after one coworker pushed his luck too far.

He never brought food. Not once. Not cookies, not chips, not even a lonely $2 soda. Yet he piled his plate higher than anyone else, always first in line, always eating the treats everyone else paid for. At first, the team tolerated it. Then they rolled their eyes at it. Eventually, resentment built like pressure under a potlid.

And then came the charity contest. The entire team chipped in. Every single person emptied their wallets, rounded up spare change, dug through drawers, and helped push their group into first place. All except him. The potluck freeloader refused to donate even a quarter.

When the team won and ordered a celebratory cheesecake, one coworker decided the mooching had gone on long enough.

Now, read the full story:

Worker Stops Chronic Potluck Freeloader With One Savage Cheesecake Move
Not the actual photoNever bring food to the potlucks? Everyone hates you?

I worked at a call center and we all sat in teams of between 8 to 12 people.

One guy on my team never brought anything to the team potlucks. But he would eat more than anyone. We had potlucks at least once a month, sometimes more.

In November, management held a competition to see which team could donate the most money to a local shelter. One guy on our team wanted to win badly. No idea...

Every person on the team donated aside from one. The same guy who never brought anything to potlucks.

On the last night, it was neck and neck with another team. Our competitive teammate asked everyone to check their desks and cars for spare change.

We asked the potluck moocher if he had change. He said he did. But he wasn’t donating. And I quote, “Not even a quarter.”

This guy was a piece of work. Think Dwight from The Office, but with no redeeming qualities. He used to clip his toenails at his desk.

We won thanks to our crazy teammate going to an ATM. The team decided we wanted cheesecake.

I decided I didn’t want the moocher to have any. I emailed the team: “We won. Anyone that donated is welcome to some cheesecake.”

Within five minutes my manager pulled me aside and said I couldn’t exclude anyone at potlucks. But I explained this was different. Everyone donated. It was a reward.

Surprisingly, she agreed with me. All day I walked past and saw the moocher staring at the cheesecake.

At the end of the day, there were one or two pieces left. He was sitting there waiting for everyone to leave so he could take them.

I was second to last there. I knew what he was doing.

I picked up the last pieces and mashed them into the garbage while making eye contact with him.

I got in trouble the next day because he complained. It was worth it. It’s not always easy to get guys like that back, but I jump when I see...

Edit: Some people asked if he might have been poor. He wasn’t. We understood not everyone could contribute every time, but he never did. Ever.

Then he would fill two plates and be first in line. He had it coming.

Reading this, I felt the quiet frustration simmering under every potluck you described. Anyone who has worked in an office knows a person like this, someone who shows up empty-handed but leaves with the heaviest plate.

Over time it wears on people, not because of the food itself, but because of what it reveals. Effort. Courtesy. Respect. Those things matter in the small moments.

I can imagine how defeating it felt to watch someone refuse to donate even a coin to a charity the whole team supported, yet feel entitled to celebrate the win. And I can imagine how satisfying it must have been to take control of that one moment, even in a slightly messy way.

This feeling of boundary-breaking and accumulated frustration sets the stage for an important discussion.

The core issue here isn’t actually cheesecake. It’s contribution, fairness, and the social contract inside small groups.

In workplaces, even tiny acts -bringing snacks, helping with a shared task, tossing in a spare quarter – create micro-signals of cooperation. When one person consistently refuses, it disrupts the emotional math of teamwork.

According to organizational psychologist. Dr. Adam Grant, reciprocity is one of the strongest predictors of relational trust at work. Grant explains that “groups flourish when members match generosity with generosity,” and that persistent “takers” create resentment that spreads through teams.

The coworker in the story didn’t just avoid contributing. He consistently consumed more than anyone else, dismissed the group’s charity effort, and treated coworkers as a resource rather than a community. Those behaviors align with what social psychologists call “free-riding.”

Research from the University of Zurich notes that free-riders cause more emotional exhaustion among colleagues than heavy workloads do.

When a group member takes advantage repeatedly, teams begin to feel drained. They give up trying to include the person. Morale drops. Eventually, someone pushes back, sometimes in big ways, sometimes in cheesecake-in-the-trash ways.

So why did throwing out the cake feel so satisfying to OP?

Because humans need fairness. Not perfection, not equality down to the penny, but effort. When one person never tries, the imbalance becomes emotional.

Clinical psychologist Dr. Ramani Durvasula explains that small, consistent boundary violations create cumulative resentment because “every incident sends the message that your needs don’t matter.”

In this case, the coworker signaled over and over: Your contribution matters, but mine doesn’t. Your effort is optional for me but required for you.

That’s where the psychological break happens.

So what could someone do in a situation like this, without resorting to food-based warfare?

• Set clear potluck expectations. Some workplaces write explicit participation rules.
• Use sign-ups. People commit to bringing specific items.
• Create a contribution-optional but consumption-optional system.

In short: contribute if you want to eat, or skip both. This takes emotion out of it.

• Talk privately and directly. Calm conversations often resolve the issue before resentment builds.
• In charity challenges, set requirements upfront.

A reward earned through group donations should have clear eligibility.

But sometimes, anonymous commenters noted, there’s simply that one coworker who behaves with entitlement no matter how kind people try to be.

What should OP take away from this?

Not that pettiness is the best route forward, but that the situation was a long time coming. People rarely snap over dessert. They snap when fairness has been violated for months.

And interestingly, OP’s manager secretly agreed. That says a lot about how visible the problem was.

In the end, the story shows how a small workplace can reflect a larger truth about relationships: when people refuse to participate in the give-and-take of community, they eventually lose the privilege of enjoying its rewards.

Check out how the community responded:

These Redditors said the freeloader had it coming. They saw the cheesecake move as karmic, not cruel. Many pointed out that even a cheap contribution would have shown respect.

HoneyCrispCrumble - I hate moochers like this. Even the most unskilled cook can grab a pack of cookies for five dollars.

Beyond_The_Pale_61 - There is always one. We had a coworker who never paid into lottery pools but expected winnings. We told her no every time.

Lasat - We had someone like this at our office. She contributed almost nothing, then devoured everything. Eventually everyone quit the potluck entirely because of her.

bang_bang_moneytree - I never contribute to work stuff either, but I also never eat the food. This guy eating without contributing makes him a [jerk].

[Reddit User] - You missed the best line. You should have told him, “You can’t have any. Not even a quarter.”

Some commenters focused less on the drama and more on potlucks themselves. They joked about coworker hygiene, mystery dishes, and how risky office food can be.

zebo_99 - Potlucks make me uncomfortable because you can’t know sanitary habits or how long food sat out. Call me picky, but I’m fine with that.

doorwaysaresafe - At my old job I couldn’t afford to contribute. My boss said I could bring eggs because they were cheap. If I brought eggs, I wouldn’t have them...

[Reddit User] - After watching coworkers skip washing their hands even after using the bathroom, I’m done with potlucks. POTLUCK = possible E. coli.

wireswires - Are potlucks only an American thing? They sound stressful everywhere else.

A wave of commenters shared their own tales of chronic takers, from the cucumber-only coworker to people who expected charity rewards without donating.

Resident-Ad-7771 - I get not wanting to pay extra fees, but store your stuff on your own property or ask for permission. Entitlement is wild.

kichwas - A neighbor once asked if it was OK to let debris fall in my yard and promised to clean it. That’s how you do it. Ask and follow...

zuidenv - My neighbor stored chopped wood on my property for six months. I put it on Craigslist as free firewood. It was gone before he got home. He threatened...

Slow4Speed - This is peak Canadian patience. If this happened in the US someone would have lit the pile on fire.

Gorilla1969 - Send her a bill for your labor too.

This story shows how small habits in shared spaces can shape how people feel about one another. Food seems trivial, but fairness never is.

When someone repeatedly takes without giving, the emotional imbalance slowly grows until even a simple cheesecake becomes a symbol for every ignored effort, every rolled eye, every moment of silent irritation. It is never really about dessert. It is about respect and reciprocity, the quiet glue that holds groups together.

OP reacted in a way that felt petty yet cathartic, and many readers understood why. People appreciate fairness. They notice when others show up for the team. They also notice when someone refuses to participate but still expects the rewards. Workplace culture thrives when everyone shares responsibility, even in small ways.

The bigger question is what we learn from moments like this. Should teams set clearer guidelines? Should boundaries come earlier? Or do some lessons only land when a cheesecake lands in the trash?

What do you think? Was OP justified in this moment of pettiness? Or should they have taken a different approach?

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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