A simple birthday party turned into an unexpected conflict when one of the moms accused me of trying to give her daughter an eating disorder over flavored sparkling water. Despite having a spread of pizza, wings, and brownies, she took issue with the La Croix her daughter was drinking, claiming it was a diet product. I was surprised by her aggressive behavior and couldn’t understand why she was so upset. It was especially strange since both she and her daughter were obese . I never imagined that providing flavored sparkling water would cause such a fuss. Was I in the wrong for offering it at the party? I’m looking for some outside perspective on this situation.
Battling accusations of causing eating disorder with sparkling water.
Mom accuses me of giving her daughter an eating disorder
Sparking water blamed for eating disorder? Mom overreacts
The argument over sparkling water turned into a diet debate.
Outrage over accusation of promoting eating disorder through sparkling water.
Flavored sparkling water vs soda: Is one a replacement?
Navigating accusations and body shaming in a delicate situation.
Mom accuses me of giving her daughter an eating disorder
A mom accuses a party host of offering diet products to her daughter. The mom becomes aggressive and accuses the host of giving her child an eating disorder. The incident occurs when the host offers La Croix to the daughter. The mom is enraged and accuses the host of trying to replace soda with artificial products. The mom later posts on Facebook about the incident, accusing the host of pushing diet products onto children that aren’t even theirs. The host is taken aback by the aggression and feels accused of something she didn’t do. The host had ordered pizzas, wings, garlic bread, tortilla chips, guacamole, salsa, pasta salad, burgers, and non-alcoholic beverages for the party. The host also points out that she is cool with her own children drinking soda in moderation. This incident raises an important question about whether flavored sparkling water is an artificial replacement for soda. It also highlights the challenges of hosting a party and catering to different preferences and dietary needs. In the next section, we will look at the reactions of social media users to this incident.
Mom overreacts to healthy drink choice, accuses OP of causing disorder.
Laughing face emoji. Discussion about diet water and eating disorders.
Choosing sparkling water is not the issue, defensive mom is ♀️
Woman accuses OP of giving her daughter an eating disorder over sparkling water. Commenters suggest she needs therapy. NTA
Comment thread debates natural vs artificial soda replacements.
Mom blamed OP for daughter’s eating disorder, but who’s responsible?
NTA, but be mindful of how comments about weight can affect self-esteem
Sparkling water debate sparks mom’s projection on daughter’s diet.
Mom accuses OP of causing eating disorder over La Croix. Commenters side with OP, feel sorry for daughter
Don’t shame people for choosing sugar-free options. NTA.
Pizza party causing eating disorder accusations? NTA wins!
You have the right to judge what you serve
NTA for sparkling water, but TA for fat-shaming comments
Commenters doubt authenticity and criticize subreddit’s negativity
Commenters call out OP for obvious NTA post.
Defending a harmless action can have unexpected consequences
Party invites for the NTA who brought sparkling water
Seltzer lover defends La Croix, raises awareness about atypical anorexia.
Comment section calling out fake post with sarcasm
Mom accuses OP of causing eating disorder over sparkling water
ESH- Commenting on someone’s weight is uncalled-for
Don’t judge someone’s struggles with eating disorders based on their body
NTA and someone needs to chill ♂️
Lacy’s issues blamed on OP in sparkling water dispute.
Defending sparkling water as not a diet product with humor
Defend yourself against false accusations with calm explanation
This commenter is definitely here for the party menu ️
Don’t blame me for your daughter’s choices #NotTheAHole
Mom overreacts to sparkling water, NTA saves daughter’s bday
Party planner is NTA and the mom is a little crazy
Offering healthy options causes accusations of harm. NTA wins.
Don’t be a helicopter parent, let your child breathe
Is this real life? Commenter and replyers think not.
La Croix: the real villain? NTA wins with witty comment.
Bizarre accusation over sparkling water. NTA for sure.
Commenter shares personal struggle with eating disorders and supports OP.
Party food proves NTA not pushing diet agenda
Judging others can backfire. ESH for body-shaming.
Sparkling water causes eating disorder accusation? NTA shuts it down
Setting diet restrictions while having unhealthy food is hypocritical
Defending sparkling water as a soda replacement
Obesity doesn’t exclude the possibility of an eating disorder.
Sparkling water causes eating disorders? NTA shuts it down
Sparkling water: the new soda substitute? NTA.
Being honest is great, but let’s choose our words wisely
OP’s comment perpetuates harmful stereotypes about obesity.
Sensitive topic, but NTA. Possible family history of eating disorders.
Mum’s crazy accusations over sparkling water. NTA stands by child.
The verdict is in: are they the a**hole?
Fizzy water won’t make you skinny, NTA shut down mom’s accusation
Commenter defends sparkling water, calls out hypocrisy, and judges weight. ♂️
Sparkling water isn’t a diet product. NTA, mom is projecting.
Last Updated on March 31, 2023 by Azka