Dinner drama can turn any evening into a battle of wills, especially when kids are involved. But what happens when a teenager refuses to order, then demands the very meal she rejected? That’s the dilemma one uncle faced when his 13-year-old niece, Penelope, stayed with him.
After she refused to pick food from the menu, he followed through on his warning, she’d be stuck with a peanut butter sandwich instead of pizza. Now, his sister is furious, and he’s asking: was he wrong?
One man refused to give his niece pizza after she rejected the menu, threw his phone, and demanded sushi











Child psychologists often highlight the importance of consistent boundaries when managing challenging behaviors.
According to Dr. Laura Markham, author of Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids, children (and even teens) test limits not necessarily because they want to be defiant, but to see how adults respond. If rules are applied inconsistently, it teaches them that tantrums or manipulation might eventually get results.
At age 13, tantrums like screaming, throwing objects, or collapsing on the ground are considered developmentally atypical. While occasional emotional outbursts are normal during adolescence due to hormonal changes and stress, repeated toddler-like meltdowns may suggest underlying issues such as poor emotional regulation, anxiety, or even an undiagnosed behavioral condition.
Research in the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry shows that extreme tantrums past early childhood can be a sign that additional support is needed.
In this case, the uncle followed best practice by:
- Setting clear expectations (“Choose something from the menu or you’ll have PB&J”).
- Offering multiple chances to make a choice.
- Following through consistently when she refused.
Experts warn against “rescuing” children from the natural consequences of their choices, because doing so undermines learning.
Dr. Ross Greene, clinical psychologist and author of The Explosive Child, emphasizes that children need both empathy and structure. Allowing Penelope to demand pizza after refusing it would not only reward her tantrum but also risk sending the wrong message to the uncle’s own children about fairness and respect.
Check out how the community responded:
These Reddit users praised the consequences as life lessons



These commenters blamed the sister’s parenting for Penelope’s behavior


One user questioned developmental issues, urging evaluation

This group called her actions age-inappropriate


These commenters emphasized not rewarding tantrums, especially to protect the uncle’s sons





In the eyes of Reddit, OP was not the jerk. Instead, his refusal to give in was seen as good parenting practice, even though Penelope wasn’t his child. While his sister believed he was cruel, commenters pointed out that enabling tantrums at 13 only reinforces the behavior.
Penelope didn’t just refuse pizza, she refused to engage, make a choice, or respect boundaries. And when she faced the natural consequence, her uncle stood firm. For most people online, that wasn’t cruelty, it was the first step in teaching her that actions have consequences.








