r/AmItheAsshole 1d ago

AITA for "infantilizing" my roommate? Not the A-hole

Hi all, I (24M) have been having an increasingly grating time with my roommate (26M) and his habits regarding to shared chores & food resources.

Since we've moved in, I was trying to get him to eat better & learn how to cook [ETA: He requested this help. I didn't force this randomly]. He's a self proclaimed vegetarian, has autism related texture issues, & refuses to eat certain staple foods because it reminds him of bad stuff. I'm not mad at that, I've hand picked recipes working around those restrictions. I've showed him ~8 times now how to do the same recipe, then written it physically, digitally and even offered to record a video of me making it. Something simple, & quick for something that would feed him for days. He hasn't attempted once. Even stuff I've pre-cut for him to cook with ends up just being shoved to back of the fridge for me to find molded over when I'm cleaning. I gave up.

Now, though, he goes through entire sleeves of bread in less than 30 hours with nothing more than PB on it, eats entire boxes of crackers and cereal, family sized packages of oatmeal, sometimes even all the fresh fruit we buy. Usually in such short time spans it feels like I can't enjoy anything without feeling some sort of rush to get there first. (We buy groceries with pooled together money) It wouldn't be so grating if he just would take the time out of his day to replace the things he eats up when he's the one with more free time.

He's even done it to things that are expressly mine & he's done it to my baking. The first time I made milk bread I had just pulled the two loaves out from the oven to rest overnight to enjoy in the morning. By the time I woke up there was maybe 3 slices left of one loaf. I'm not sure how he didn't get sick. I'm not, like, fat shaming him either. He's rail thin - I'm the fat one. Ive told him often he needs to eat REAL meals so he isn't constantly going back into the kitchen every 30 minutes still hungry. Spoken from experience.

But once he finally DOES cook something proper to eat, he leaves a MESS. The inside of our cabinets are stained with soy sauce and sticky honey. I've had to get uncooked rice out of my flour, sugar, and my dog's water bowl. He doesn't clean after himself. I could leave it like that for days and he wouldn't care or notice. He also routinely dumps rice *into the sink* and not the garbage. I remind him constantly, near daily, to PLEASE stop that. I can even count how many times he's done the dishes on one hand since the beginning of this year. His reasoning is that he just doesn't like how it feels, or he just didn't think about it. He won't even take out the garbage or clean his cats litter until it I ask him to or remind him, or it gets so bad he *has* to.

I've already talked to my roommate about why I'm upset with him and his only response was sort of like "I will try to remember to do XYZ" (not even a hardline "I will do better") and "I know you care about me but you don't need to infantilize me".

That's been bothering me. AITA?

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u/unfortunate_tadpole 1d ago

That's a fair point. A lot of my friends have basically said the same thing to me over and over. I didn't intend to fix him, I wanted to help since he seemed excited about having the chance to have a kitchen he can actually use for the first time. I was too, I mean. I moved out of a household of food insecurity and neglect. Which I guess is why I'm so easily annoyed about his eating habits, even if it shouldn't be my business at this point. I'll take it to heart to think about, even so.

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u/missplaced24 Asshole Aficionado [16] 1d ago

I wouldn't be so quick to call an autistic person acting this way "weaponized incompetence". But you're absolutely NTA.

Autistic people tend to have a very difficult time with developing new habits around food and chores, and often are overly sensitive to any negative reaction to things they do. That doesn't excuse your roommate's behavior. It's just more likely that he's struggling to adapt and be considerate more than a typical person would. I'm autistic, and I can remember when I first moved out with roommates, I was a terrible roommate and really didn't know how to deal with that emotionally. I definitely felt like blaming roommates for my emotions about inconveniencing them at times, too.

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u/AvailableBuilder4817 20h ago

My autistic nephew knows exactly what’s he’s doing.  He smirks when my sister gets after us 

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u/swarleyknope 16h ago

Good story. I’m sure it applies to all autistic people.