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College Student Enforces Childhood Food Locks On Visiting Mom To Finally Serve Taste Of Own Medicine

by Jeffrey Stone
November 20, 2025
in Social Issues

A university freshman braced herself for war when her mom announced a visit after a year away. Growing up, every snack was guarded like gold bars: fridge padlocks, see-through meat safes, cameras glaring at the cookie jar, and zero lunch ever packed.

Hunger was the household norm. Now the daughter’s stocking the kitchen and installing tiny locks of her own, ready to flip the script and starve her mother out for every skipped meal. She’s serving revenge colder than an empty pantry, and Reddit’s howling for her to lock the biscuit tin and throw away the key.

A university student considers mirroring her mother’s extreme food-control rules during an upcoming visit to highlight past neglect.

College Student Enforces Childhood Food Locks On Visiting Mom To Finally Serve Taste Of Own Medicine
Not the actual photo.

'WIBTA if I implemented the same rules regarding food that my mum enforced upon me when growing up?'

My mum (40f) is coming to see me (19f) in two weeks - for the first time since I started university.

Just for some context, my family moved abroad a year ago and I haven’t seen any of them since.

The distance has given me time to reflect on some of my mother’s strange, obsessive behaviours regarding food,

and I’ve since realised that some of her actions were somewhat ‘abusive’, however I use this term very lightly.

To outline the situation, we were never allowed to take food from the kitchen without asking.

If we were caught doing so, it was called ‘stealing’ and we would be shouted at and/or sometimes punished.

It escalated at some point to locks being placed on the cupboards, a transparent ‘meat lock’ being placed in the fridge and a camera being installed in the kitchen.

She would monitor how many times a day I’d be in the kitchen. If I had been in the too many times she would chastise me, saying that I’m obsessed...

obsessed with always being in the kitchen and that I have serious ‘food issues’.

During secondary school, I was never sent to school with packed lunch, nor was any money put on my card so that I could buy food.

At some point I started to cook the family dinners, and the leftovers would always be allocated to my stepdad,

whilst the rest of us would go to school with nothing. We would sometimes get takeaways for dinner,

but often times my mum and stepdad got takeaway only for themselves, saying that we weren’t allowed any.

Now, the instance in which I could possibly be the a__hole is that I plan to treat my mum as she treated me in regards to food when she visits.

I told my boyfriend of my plan to enforce these ‘rules’, that there will be a curfew for the kitchen,

that she is not allowed to take or eat food without permission - and if she does so I will call her a thief.

I was also thinking of ordering food for myself and telling her that’s she’s not allowed any.

I honestly just want to show her how ridiculous she is about food, but at the same time I just want to be petty because why not.

My boyfriend is telling me that I’d be immature for doing this, and that since my relationship with her is already difficult,

I’d be better off taking the high road rather than adding fuel to the flames. My dad and sister also agree.

Whilst I can’t deny that doing this would be immature, I can’t help but feel that she deserves a taste of her own medicine. So WIBTA?

EDIT: Okay damn like I didn’t expect this post to actually get much interaction. But I would like to clarify a couple of things:

To all the people who’ve been calling it abusive, I’m unsure of how to feel about that.

Like it did hit me at some point that this wasn’t normal, but it’s not as bad as I was making out.

Like I feel like I need to clarify that the situation wasn’t as severe as I made it seem.

From around age 16 she was less strict, and the locks on cupboards were removed as well as the fridge safe.

As I got more financially independent I was able to by myself food whenever I wanted, even though this annoyed her sometimes.

The only time I guess I was ‘starved’ was at school during lunch. Otherwise I wouldn’t call this being starved, I was just somewhat monitored around food.

To all the people telling me to cut her off, I find it hard to completely resent her because she is my mother, and I recognise that she has done...

At the same time, that doesn’t excuse her behaviour. I’ve realised that she is a narcissistic parent, so I’m not expecting much/or any accountability from her.

What this young woman described isn’t “strict housekeeping”—it’s textbook food-related control and neglect that left her hungry at school and terrified of the fridge.

Child psychologists classify withholding food as a basic need as a form of emotional and physical neglect, and unfortunately it’s more common than people admit.

According to a 2023 report from the American Academy of Pediatrics, chronic food insecurity in childhood (even when it’s selective and parent-controlled) is linked to higher risks of anxiety, disordered eating, and trust issues later in life.

The temptation to flip the script is completely understandable. There’s something poetically satisfying about watching someone taste their own recipe. But experts who work with adult children of controlling parents are nearly unanimous: revenge stunts rarely deliver the “aha” moment we crave.

Clinical psychologist Dr. Ramani Durvasula, a leading voice on narcissistic family dynamics, explains in her 2024 book It’s Not You: Identifying and Healing from Narcissistic People: “Just as a tiger can’t change its stripes, a narcissist will not stop manipulating and invalidating you, no matter how much you try to appease them.”

This stark truth underscores why flipping the script on a controlling parent rarely sparks the epiphany we hope for. Instead, it often invites more of the same denial and deflection that defined the relationship.

In the context of this Redditor’s dilemma, where food became a battleground for power, such unyielding patterns mean Mom’s likely response to mirrored restrictions would be outrage or gaslighting, not introspection, leaving the daughter trapped in an exhausting cycle rather than breaking free from it.

Durvasula’s insight, drawn from decades of clinical work with abuse survivors, reminds us that true empowerment lies not in petty reciprocity, which only perpetuates the toxicity, but in recognizing the narcissist’s rigidity as their limitation, not yours.

A healthier power move? Calmly set the opposite tone from day one. Stock the kitchen, label nothing off-limits, and casually offer snacks like it’s the most normal thing in the world. That quiet contrast can feel louder than any dramatic showdown.

Therapy is also a game-changer here. Many universities offer free sessions, and unpacking years of “you have food issues” shame with a professional can be far more healing than any perfectly executed petty plot.

At the end of the day, the best revenge might just be living (and eating) completely unbothered.

See what others had to share with OP:

Some people say NTA and fully support giving the abusive mother a taste of her own medicine or refusing her visit entirely.

Busy-Magician-6309 − Definitely NTA. Your mother deserves a taste of her own medicine.

Agreeable-Book-7018 − Just don't let her visit

NeverMeantDuckin − NTA. But I wouldn’t ever, EVER let her step foot in my home at all.

Some people advise against the petty plan because the mother will never understand or apologize, and it will only hurt OP more.

tialaila − I mean why, why bother she's not going to apologise you're not gonna get any of the gratification you want,

you'll just be secretly hoping she'll get annoyed so you can have a proper argument about it, just don't let her come

superrm81 − NTA but this isn’t a game you can win You won’t get recognition or justice from this,

and I think your own mental health will deteriorate in the process. You want to give her a taste of her own medicine

so she’ll understand, but she won’t, she’s broken somehow.

She’ll never have the wake up call you’re looking for, and even if she did… she’d never admit it.

Don’t let her come, don’t let her in. That would speak volumes!

LimitlessMegan − I’m not a fan of using diminutive terms with strangers, it just feels condescending,

but I REALLY want to start this comment with one so you get that I’m saying this with all kinds of Internet Mom Love…

What you just described is abuse. Not “lightly” abuse, but straight up abuse. Your mom abused you.

This is abuse. Neglect. Deprivation of basic needs and resources. Your mom straight up, hard core abused you. And I’m so sorry.

You deserve better. You deserved to be loved. To be put before her own needs and wants. To be fed, and more than that nurtured.

And you weren’t through no fault of your own. I’m going to say NTA for the bot, but I’m going to tell you: don’t do this plan.

It won’t work. It won’t accomplish anything for you and it will probably end up in an explosion and further (verbal/emotional) abuse towards you.

If your mom saw you as a commodity or a belonging when you were young, she still sees you that way.

She is not going to be capable of “getting the lesson” you want to show her.

I have a feeling doing this will only make YOU feel worse and have little to no impact on her.

But listen, also, you don’t have to put her up if you don’t want to. Talk to your partner and devise a plan for removing her early if you need...

This is your first time seeing/spending a lot of time with her since you’ve come to the realization that she is actually your abuser.

Make a back up plan for if this turns out to be way harder than you think it will. Also, research Grey Rock strategy and use it <3 Hugs, if...

Some people say what the mother did was outright abuse (not “lightly” abusive) and strongly recommend therapy while warning against petty revenge.

Complex_Machine6189 − NTA, but your boyfriend is right. Nothing good will come out of this, it will only deepen the rift.

And btw, it wasn't abuse-ish, it was abuse. She let you starve. a wonder you haven't developed an eating-disorder.

I would rather at some point call her out for being an abusive parent. Also, consider therapy -

when she did stuff like that, I wonder what else she might have done which has left scars?

Your mother was (and is?) abusive. That is nit a weird quirk, this sounds more serious then you think.

[Reddit User] − I’ve since realised that some of her actions were somewhat ‘abusive’, however I use this term very lightly.

There's nothing light about this. What she did was straight up abuse. NTA.

Some people suggest calmly confronting the mother about house rules or simply canceling the visit instead of revenge.

Inevitable-Force2342 − Thinking about it I can't give a vote here, but a suggestion.

When she comes by, sit her down and have a talk like "I know you are used to different things, but in MY house eating is okay.

It is allowed to go to the kitchen any time one likes and get something to eat.

If anybody orders takeout everyone needs to be asked of they want something.

Do you get this? It might be different, but I assure you, eating when one is hungry is totally okay here."

You might even resort to asking her if she is hungry/wants something, and then inviting her to dare to visit the kitchen like speaking to a toddler.

It might not be as harsh as what you planned, but will get your message across, while also demonstrating how far you have come.

coffeemom23 − YWBTA. If you have this much built-up resentment against your mother (and justifiably, it sounds like),

be an adult, call her or write to her to tell her why you're upset, and postpone her visit.

I'm sure a lot of people will applaud the instinct to "be petty because why not" -

well, because most of the time being petty absolutely sucks, and isn't an effective way to resolve interpersonal issues.

This whole saga is a masterclass in how childhood rules can echo way louder once you’re the one holding the keys, literally. Would giving Mom the same locked-cupboard treatment finally make her see the light, or would it just torch what’s left of the relationship?

And honestly, is the sweetest victory proving you’re nothing like her… or watching her squirm for three days? Drop your verdict below, would you hand her the key or change the locks forever?

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

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

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