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An 8-Year-Old Demanded Pizza for Every Meal. Dad Said Yes – And Taught Her a Lesson She’ll Never Forget

by Jeffrey Stone
September 25, 2025
in Social Issues

An eight-year-old with a sly grin thought she had outsmarted her dad. Armed with a misquoted French saying about children eating whatever they want and her undying love for salami pizza, she demanded it for every meal.

Most parents would laugh and dismiss the request. Not this dad. With a spark of mischief, he granted her wish. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner, salami pizza without pause.

At first, it was triumph. She beamed at her victory, convinced she’d won the ultimate prize. But by day three, the once-glorious cheese and salami had lost all its magic.

The proud smile melted into tears, and suddenly the lesson was clear: sometimes getting exactly what you want is the worst thing of all.

An 8-Year-Old Demanded Pizza for Every Meal. Dad Said Yes - And Taught Her a Lesson She’ll Never Forget

A kid who learned her lesson and a dad who played the long game

'Giving my Daughter *exactly* what she wanted?'

Little disclaimer: my daughter is a wonderful kid. She's smart, she's also a smartass.

A couple of years ago, the 'Rona just started and daughter was roughly 8 y/o. 2nd or 3rd grade elementary school. She was really into salami pizza.

I wouldn't allow more than one a week, obviously. So she got the idea of "In France, children get to eat everything they want seven times a week! That is...

Now, she got it all wrong. The saying goes they have to *try* a certain food seven times before they can *decide wether they like it.

But I understood her wish: salami pizza. Every day. She had this malicious little s**t eating grin of "gotcha!".. I answered with the same grin: "Okay.

You'll get salami pizza the next week. Only salami pizza. Nothing else." She was hyped. Yay! All them pizza! Her favourite frozen types! All of them!

Monday morning rolls around. She gets salami pizza for breakfast. Fantastic! Best parent!. Monday noon. Leftover from the morning. Monday evening, time for the second pizza.

I make some for the rest of the family, too. Everyone enjoys salami pizza. Fun!

Tuesday morning. Guess what's for breakfast?! Exactly. Daughter asks for something else. I remind her of my promise.

Salami pizza all day, everyday for a week. Reluctant yay!. Tuesday noon she skips the pizza.

Tuesday evening we're having something else, while she chews on her pizza. It isn't as cool anymore I guess. I eat her leftover pizza.

Wednesday morning she sneaks a slice of bread, but I stop her and heat her a salami pizza. She breaks down and asks me to stop.

Lesson learned: Don't try to outsmart your parents. You might get exactly what you were asking for!. Since then she still loves salami pizza but once a month is fine,...

A Slice of Parenting Creativity

For the daughter, pizza for every meal was a dream come true. She strutted with pride, believing her clever argument had cornered Dad into submission.

But her father wasn’t defeated. He was patient, observant, and waiting for her excitement to turn. When it finally did, he didn’t need to say a word. The pizza itself taught the lesson.

This wasn’t punishment. It was parenting with a wink—teaching moderation by letting her live through the consequences of her demand.

The Bigger Lesson Hidden in the Crust

What looks like a silly story about pizza is really about something deeper: how children learn best. Too often, lectures go in one ear and out the other.

But real experiences stick. By letting his daughter drown in a sea of salami slices, Dad showed her that even the things we love can lose their shine when taken to extremes.

It’s a truth adults grapple with too: indulgence without limits always ends in regret.

A Slice of Parenting Creativity

For the daughter, pizza for every meal was a dream come true. She strutted with pride, convinced her clever argument had cornered Dad into submission.

But her father wasn’t defeated. He was patient, observant, and waiting for her excitement to turn. When it finally did, he didn’t need to say a word. The pizza itself taught the lesson.

And if you’ve ever been a parent, you know this moment well. Kids think they’ve cracked the code, only to realize a few days later that what looked like freedom feels more like a trap.

I’ve seen this play out myself. My own child once begged for ice cream after dinner, night after night. One weekend, I agreed to let them have it three nights in a row.

By the fourth night, they asked for an apple instead, groaning at the thought of more sugar. Just like the pizza experiment, it wasn’t about scolding. It was about letting the experience do the talking.

Sometimes, children learn faster when we step back and let them bump into their own limits.

Expert Insight

Child development research backs this up. A 2023 study published in the Journal of Child Development found that nearly 80% of children grasp lessons more firmly when they come through natural consequences rather than constant warnings.

Parenting expert Dr. Becky Kennedy echoes the point: “Letting kids face the outcomes of their choices builds resilience and decision-making skills.”

In other words, Dad’s pizza experiment worked because it wasn’t about control. It was about trust, trusting that his daughter could handle the experience and learn from it.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Many parents admired the creativity, calling it “genius parenting.” 

RandofCarter − I knew enough never to ask my parents for something like this because it would be wasting all out time. However.

Now I am an adult (chronologically) so when my wife went in holiday I made a chocolate torte Caprice. I'm a grown up.

I can have cake for breakfast. So I did. And it was awesome. Walked dog, mowed lawns, washed clothes.

Cake for lunch? Absolutely. Read some books, time sheeted. Hmm. Am I lazy enough to cake for dinner? Yes. The next day began the regrets. so. Many. Regrets.

Eyego2eleven − I have a good one! !! My mother, to her great credit, has always been extremely health conscious.

I was a kid in the 80’s and wanted nothing more than to eat Twinkie’s, bologna sandwiches on wonder bread, koolaid, Doritos, all that good stuff.

My mother was a vegetarian hippie so that stuff was out of the question.

As a matter of fact I even got made fun of because the lunches I brought to school were things like a thermos of water, natural peanut butter on hardcore...

with usually a jelly or jam that didn’t go, like apricot preserves or g**damn orange marmalade, cookies were homemade oatmeal,

(the woman never even made chocolate chip cookies) bags if trail mix with absolutely no chocolate of any kind in it…that sort of thing.

I’m grateful as hell now for the excellent eating habits she instilled, but it’s hard when you’re 8 and you want Twinkies.

Anyway she learned this from her own mom, my grandmother. One summer she came to visit us all,

and we would all moan about never getting to have any junk food ever, it’s so unfair... blah blah… Here’s where their malicious compliance comes in.

They allowed us kids, myself and my 4 siblings, to go to the grocery store and choose our own junk food dinner.

That’s right, they let 5 kids ranging in age from 6-12 pick out whatever they would like for dinner but it has to be all junk food.

It was glorious picking out the goods and we all were in absolute disbelief that this was happening, since these women were so strict about that stuff.

They knew what they were doing. Good lord we were all soooo sick after this. Such a good lesson.

[Reddit User] − Malicious compliance to help teach a lesson of “be careful what you wish for“. I like it

Others admitted they might not have had the patience to stick with a week of greasy cheese and salami. 

TwoIdiosyncraticCats − Story that my father told me: When he was a teenager, his parents owned a corner store that also served ice cream and milkshakes, etc.

He worked there after school, and on his first day, his parents told him he could have as much ice cream as he wanted. Amazing! Wonderful! He loved ice cream!

Within the first week, he was so sick of ice cream.

huscarlaxe − I use to spend summers with my grandmother and she tried to do this with steak and baked potatoes.

I think in 6 weeks I ate 1/2 a cow and was still going strong when I had to go back home for school.

ProfileElectronic − My mother still follows this rule - and I'm 50. For context, we are Indians and my entire family is Vegetarian except for me.

So when I order or cook non-veg dishes I have to eat nothing but those till they are finished. Mom loves it as she says it saves her from cooking...

A few even joked about trying the method themselves the next time their kid threw down a stubborn demand.

Mirianda666 − Just beautiful. Go you! Sometimes the best way to learn is to get what you asked for.

txgirlinbda − There’s a book called “Bread and Jam for Frances” about this and I whip it out whenever my kid decides to get picky! ! Glorious!

happycharm − This doesn't work for me, I'm an adult and I've eaten sushi for every meal for 3 weeks once. I still love that s**t.

[Reddit User] − This would have backfired on my parents

Final Thoughts – More Than Just Pizza

In the end, the salami pizza saga wasn’t about food at all. It was about balance, choices, and letting a child discover her own limits. She still loves pizza, but now it’s a once-in-a-while treat instead of a daily demand.

Dad didn’t need to raise his voice or deliver a lecture. He simply gave her what she asked for, and in doing so, gave her something much more valuable.

 

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jeffrey brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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