Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Woman Considers Quitting Cookies After Her Workplace Treats Her Like A Snack Machine

by Leona Pham
December 7, 2025
in Social Issues

Some traditions start out sweet and innocent… until everyone begins treating them like an obligation. That’s exactly what happened to one part-time quilt-shop employee who simply enjoyed baking chocolate chip cookies for monthly retreats.

Her treats were so good they became a selling point, but somewhere along the way, appreciation turned into expectation and her identity got reduced to “the cookie lady.” Now she’s wondering if she’d be wrong to stop baking them altogether. Let’s look at her situation.

A woman considers quitting baking her famous cookies for quilt retreats after people start valuing her treats more than her

Woman Considers Quitting Cookies After Her Workplace Treats Her Like A Snack Machine
not the actual photo

'WIBTA if I stopped baking cookies for the retreats that have come to expect them?'

I work for a quilt shop part time and once a month we have quilting retreats.

Over time I’ve started to work more at the retreats and it’s come to the point

where I cook for the retreats and the owners reimburse me for ingredients-

with the exception of the batch of chocolate chip cookies that I usually make for free.

Not to brag, but I make some damn good chocolate chip cookies.

The recipe is secret and it took me years to get the way I want it.

The cookies have become a staple of the retreats

and the owners have started telling people about the cookies to convince them to buy a retreat spot.

I don’t get paid for baking these cookies and I don’t even get reimbursed for the ingredients to make them.

I started doing it just because I liked baking them and giving them to people.

It was fun at first but now when I walk into the shop on retreat times,

I get bombarded with “oh did you bring cookies? Where are the cookies?”

I can’t tell you the last time I got a “hi how are you” from any of the retreaters or the other staff

that work solely on the retreats. Half of the people who come to the retreats don’t even know my name.

They call me “cookie lady,” despite being reminded of my name several times.

This month I’ve got a friend in town and told the owners I couldn’t cook for this month’s retreat.

When one of the other retreat staffers heard this they said “we will miss your cookies.”

Not “we will miss you” or even a “have a good time with your friend.”

I feel like at this point my entire worth to them is placed in the damn cookies

and I don’t even want to bake them for them anymore.

I love baking-but part of that love is experimenting with other stuff

and the one time I brought brownies instead of my cookies I got bitched at.

I feel forced into making them and it’s not fun anymore.

I don’t even get paid to make them, but suddenly it’s expected of me and it gets me nothing but stress and hurt feelings.

So, WIBTA if I stopped baking them and just told people to deal with it?

OP later posted an update:

UPDATE: It’s been more than a year since my original post-which I know is quite a long time.

It seems a bit silly now that I was so consumed and frustrated by something so small as cookies but here we go.

As a number of the comments suggested, I ended up talking to the owner of the shop

and telling her that I wasn’t going to bake cookies for the retreats anymore.

I told her I felt belittled and disrespected by her behavior and that of the retreaters.

Her response was basically “they expect the cookies. What do you expect me to tell them?

They’re not going to want to come to retreats anymore.

You should have never baked them at all-this whole issue is going to be bad for business.”

I went home feeling completely invalidated. She completely gaslit me.

I read and reread some of your commends multiple times and decided to stand my ground on this.

She didn’t threaten to fire me or anything (not that she could have- she needed me)

but she continued to guilt trip me and try to manipulate me into baking again.

She even had some of the retreaters come to me offering me money to bake for the retreats.

At this point it wasn’t about the pay- it was how people were treating me.

I refused and started applying to other jobs because I was sick of the environment.

The thing is, I’m actually a licensed pharmacist.

I was working for minimum wage at a quilt shop because I was burnt out in an over saturated and overworked field.

I was depressed because I was a doctor of pharmacy-8 years of college completed,

and I didn’t feel mentally fit for working in that field because of my mental health.

I worked for this quilt shop for a year.

I learned some things, got a break, and regained some of the mental health I lost.

This cookie debacle was the push I needed to regain my self worth and go back to the field that I wanted to be in.

Within a month I found a job as a pharmacist at a federal prison. I loved it from my first day.

I’ve been there a year now and I love every day of it.

My job has meaning, my coworkers are awesome, and every day is a new experience.

It took a few months, but I got my baking mojo back.

I’m known throughout the prison by my actual name and people come to visit the pharmacy for some cookies

(or whatever baked good I decide upon) and they stay for conversation.

I found a job I love and a group of people who appreciate my baking and don’t use me as a cookie slave.

Thanks, Reddit. You guys are awesome.

There is a quiet kind of hurt that forms when people stop seeing you and start seeing only what you provide. Many readers will recognize that sting, the moment when generosity turns into expectation, and appreciation fades into entitlement.

In this story, the employee who once baked cookies out of joy now finds herself reduced to “the cookie lady,” her identity overshadowed by something she never meant to become. What began as a gesture of warmth has turned into emotional depletion.

At the heart of this situation is a conflict between personal boundaries and external pressure. She isn’t just tired of baking; she’s tired of feeling invisible. The retreats have grown used to the comfort of her cookies, yet they haven’t extended that same warmth back to her.

Each “Where are the cookies?” chips away at her sense of value, turning her from a person into a commodity. When affection becomes transactional, resentment naturally follows. Her internal struggle isn’t about sweets, it’s about feeling dismissed, taken for granted, and unappreciated.

A fresh way to view her experience is to consider how different emotional expectations shape social labor. Many women, especially in service-oriented environments, are subtly trained to equate kindness with obligation. What others frame as “tradition,” she experiences as emotional conscription.

The retreaters aren’t malicious; they simply respond to what they enjoy. But the psychological impact hits differently when someone’s creativity becomes a performance instead of a choice.

For her, the cookies represented care. For them, the cookies became a product. That disconnect is where the hurt lives.

The concept of Emotional labor offers insight into what’s happening. Emotional labor refers to the effort and control it takes to manage one’s feelings (or outward expression) to meet expectations from a job or role.

Studies show that when emotional labor becomes invisible and unpaid, yet expected nonetheless, people often experience burnout, emotional exhaustion, and reduced sense of personal worth.

Seen through this lens, her reaction isn’t overblown; it’s predictable. She invested emotion, creativity, and personal resources into something meant to be joyful.

When people treated the cookies as an entitlement rather than a gift, they disrupted that emotional equation. The continual demand for a service she didn’t sign up for inevitably erodes motivation, joy, and self-respect.

Stepping back from baking, whether temporarily or permanently, would let her reclaim boundaries. A realistic solution might be to reserve her baking energy for people who value her, not just her recipe.

Sometimes the healthiest decision is remembering that kindness is a gift, not a job description. It’s entirely reasonable to stop giving when the act no longer feels kind to oneself.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

This group expressed concern that people were taking advantage of OP’s generosity and treating the cookies as an entitlement

[Reddit User] − NTA You were doing them a favor for a while and that's commendable.

But if you feel like there are other ways you'd like to spend your time/energy/money going forward,

that's totally reasonable. You don't owe them anything.

Hell, even if they had been paying you for everything, and they were all very friendly and respectful,

it would still be reasonable for you to decide that you simply didn't want to do it anymore.

It's not like you were under contract or something.

Mystery_Substance − NTA. They're taking advantage and it seems that all you amount to with others is the cookies.

They don't care that you want to cook something else it just "gimme my cookie fix".

I feel a little sad because you seem tired and emotionally drained. Hugs if you want them. :)

myfairdrama − NTA. I had the same thing happen to me with my cookies at gaming tournaments.

Once I had to come straight from work and hadn’t had time to bake any,

and they ridiculed me so much I ended up just leaving.

One thing I did notice worked later was asking why they felt entitled to them,

when I wasn’t getting reimbursed for ingredients or the hours I sunk into baking literally hundreds of cookies.

That put things in perspective for them. Bottom line, don’t let people ruin something you love.

You deserve to be appreciated for your kindness and I hope you enjoy your retreats!

These commenters encouraged OP to stop baking for a while to see who truly valued them

Jajakomopowers − NTA. Dont make the cookies.

Either you'll find out it's not as big of deal you think it is OR you'll find out that you're friends are a bunch of jerks...

both outcomes would be better then ruining the joy you get from doing something you love.

Maruset − NTA. Friend of mine had the same problem.

She got a new job, wanted to make friends and loves baking so she brought in treats fairly regularly

but people being dicks, only cared about the free delicious cookies for the most part

and shortly after I found myself eating a lot of cookies.

​ Edit: You said your recipe is secret, but any tips for a mediocre cookie creator?

ChasingMyCoattails − NTA, in fact I'd be even more pissed that the quilt shop is using your cookies

as a selling point and they're not even reimbursing you! Cookie ingredients ain't cheap, either!

A couple pounds of butter and chocolate chips? I'd go broke if I had to bake cookies all the time.

You should be able to just say "Sorry, can't do it anymore" without consequences

because it WAS a basically free service you were providing.

But I suppose if they try and argue about it (or try to guilt you into it),

you could say you'd provide the cookies for a price. And not just the price of ingredients but the labor too.

Because nothing turns people off more than the thought of having to pay for something that they've been getting for free.

That's exactly how I felt when I learned that Pizza Hut started charging for parmesan cheese packets.

The world has been a dreary wasteland ever since.

This group recommended that OP either turn the cookies into a paid offering or address the issue of unpaid labor with the shop owners

danbog − NTA. Why not turn this into a little side business?

Tell the quilting store owners that you'd be happy to continue making cookies for the retreats for $$$.

Kitten_Foster − NTA- Also, if I am understanding things correctly, your employer may be breaking the law.

It sounds like they reimburse you for ingredients, but not your time, for the regular food.

Unless they are a non-profit, they cannot use donated labor and they need to pay you for your work.

Here's a relevant askamanager.org column on the matter-

https://www.askamanager.org/2018/08/can-local-businesses-ethically-accept-volunteer-help-are-quick-thanks-emails-annoying-and-more.html

Her advice when addressing legal violations is to talk to the owner as though you are on the same team.

So say, "I just found out that we may be in violation of labor laws here.

It turns out that as a for profit business, you can't accept volunteer work,

so unless you begin to pay me for the hours I spend cooking, I can't cook for the retreat anymore."

[Reddit User] − NTA - they've started acting entitled to your cookies rather than appreciating them.

You're paying out of your own pocket and spending your own time on the cookies.

If all you get in return is forced expectations, stress and hurt feelings then it's not worth it.

These commenters highlighted how disrespectful it was for others to reduce OP to “the cookie lady”

Dogismygod − NTA. You do not owe inconsiderate clods free anything,

especially something that costs you time and money.

They are incredibly disrespectful of you and considering that they've made it clear

they prefer your cookies to your actual presence ("We will miss your cookes?!?"

but you don't matter as long as the cookie vending machine keeps working)

I would never make another cookie for anyone there.

Bangbangsmashsmash − NTA. Awww your cookie is so good that they have become part of your identity.

I’m sure that they mean to compliment you, but I completely see how they’ve missed the mark.

SluppyB − INFO I dont understand why they reimburse you for some ingredients but not for the chocolate chip cookies?

But I do think you would be NTA here because I completely sympathise with the situation;

it feels horrible when people start overlooking you as a person and appearing to only value a service you provide.

TSwizzlesNipples − NTA I do BBQ as a side gig/hobby.

I'm fairly decent at it and often have leftovers that I will take in to work to feed my team.

It's gotten to the point that if I don't bring something in for a few months,

they start asking when I'm going to bring food in again, which I consider to be rude,

because the main offender is my "boss" who recognizes how much it costs me to do it, but never chips in.

PsychoticNurse − NTA. I would be pissed in that situation.

Also, I really hate when people don't say hi or ask how you're doing,

they just go straight into questions or complaining or something like that.

I usually will stop them and say hi, how are you and wait for them to remember their damn manners.

You are not obligated to bake for anyone at work.

I suggest stop doing it. When asked why, be honest and let them know all the reasons you stated here.

Make sure you sound confident and strong; people like that will try to manipulate you

if they sense even a tiny bit of insecurity in your words.

And stop answering to cookie lady, not even to remind them of your name.

Pretend like you did't even hear them. If all else fails, think about

if you want to continue working with such rude ungrateful people.

Me and my coworkers would appreciate you and your cookies lol.

LucidOutwork − NTA If having cookies is that important to them, they can get them from a bakery

or offer to pay you (which you can decline). They are both taking advantage of you and diminishing your worth.

But what do you think? Should she put her foot down and reclaim her baking joy, or would withdrawing the cookies spark more drama than it’s worth? Share your thoughts below!

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

Related Posts

Homeowner Tells Neighbors They Got What They Paid For Over Shaded Garden Mansion
Social Issues

Homeowner Tells Neighbors They Got What They Paid For Over Shaded Garden Mansion

1 month ago
Office Drama Brews After Worker Gets Labeled a Freeloader for Showing Up Empty-Handed to a ‘Chill’ Hangout
Social Issues

Office Drama Brews After Worker Gets Labeled a Freeloader for Showing Up Empty-Handed to a ‘Chill’ Hangout

2 months ago
Father Kicks His Mom Out Of His Son’s Birthday After She Tries To Bring His Ex’s Son
Social Issues

Father Kicks His Mom Out Of His Son’s Birthday After She Tries To Bring His Ex’s Son

4 months ago
Man Paid For Unemployed Girlfriend’s Everything, Now Jobless, He Asks For Shared Bills, She Upset, Quits Dates
Social Issues

Man Paid For Unemployed Girlfriend’s Everything, Now Jobless, He Asks For Shared Bills, She Upset, Quits Dates

1 month ago
Roommate’s Fridge Fumble Ruins $670 Weight Loss Meds, Court Threat Looms
Social Issues

Roommate’s Fridge Fumble Ruins $670 Weight Loss Meds, Court Threat Looms

3 months ago
Dad Misses Daughter’s Last-Minute Wedding Because He Already Paid for a Motorcycle Trip
Social Issues

Dad Misses Daughter’s Last-Minute Wedding Because He Already Paid for a Motorcycle Trip

3 months ago

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POST

Email me new posts

Email me new comments

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

TRENDING

35 Stunning Vintage Photos of Barbara Carrera from the 1970s and ’80s
CELEB

35 Stunning Vintage Photos of Barbara Carrera from the 1970s and ’80s

by Marry Anna
August 30, 2024
0

...

Read more
Two Gamers Turn Abandoned Convention Kids’ Day Into Costly Revenge Parents Never Saw Coming
Social Issues

Two Gamers Turn Abandoned Convention Kids’ Day Into Costly Revenge Parents Never Saw Coming

by Jeffrey Stone
December 2, 2025
0

...

Read more
Jonathan Majors Spotted In Gym, Possibly Preparing For New Film Role
MOVIE

Jonathan Majors Spotted In Gym, Possibly Preparing For New Film Role

by Marry Anna
April 17, 2024
0

...

Read more
Dan Levy Made A Deal With Netflix To Play And Direct A New RomCom Project
News

Dan Levy Made A Deal With Netflix To Play And Direct A New RomCom Project

by Anna Martinez
April 17, 2024
0

...

Read more
Stay-At-Home Dad Leaves Dishes For Days, Calls Wife Insane For Demanding Clean House
Social Issues

Stay-At-Home Dad Leaves Dishes For Days, Calls Wife Insane For Demanding Clean House

by Leona Pham
October 17, 2025
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM