🎤 AITA for Wanting to Hang Out with Jack and His Big Kid Friends But Also Dictate Every Game Like a Sugar-Fueled Cruise Director?
By James, Age 3 (Playtime Enthusiast, Activity Dictator, Uninvited But Emotionally Essential)
Hi. Hello. It’s me. James. I am small in stature but large in spirit, and today I would like to address an injustice.
Jack had friends over. A whole squad of seven-year-olds doing things like crafting elaborate Lego societies and casually discussing robot ethics like they’ve seen things. I wanted in.
I walked in holding a popsicle. Not for sharing—just to show status.
I said, “Guys, we play now. I have rules.”
Jack said, “You can watch.”
I said, “I’m the boss of play.”
He said, “You’re wearing your pajama pants as a scarf.”
I said, “I’m powerful.”
They didn’t listen. They built. They plotted. They whispered secret stuff like “laser fort” and “you can’t tell James.”
Rude. I retaliated the only way I knew how: I lay on the floor directly in front of their creation and declared, “My tummy is here now.”
They asked me to move.
I declared a nap strike.
They tried to distract me with coloring. I said, “THIS IS WAR AND I BROUGHT CRAYON ARMOR.”
Eventually, I was offered a job as “the monster,” which felt both flattering and marginalizing.
They said, “You can roar and chase us.”
I chased them for four minutes, then demanded a snack and a leadership role.
Jack sighed. “James, you can’t be the boss of everything.”
I said, “But I’m three. I was born to command chaos.”
He blinked. “You spilled applesauce on the remote.”
I said, “Exactly.”
So… AITA?
For:
- Wanting to be included in big kid activities but also assign roles and themes like I’m producing a play?
- Interrupting peaceful Lego diplomacy with emotional declarations and rogue crayon usage?
- Insisting all games end with me winning, even when I entered mid-match?
- Demanding snacks, narrative control, and the right to wear a towel like a power cape?
Or am I simply a visionary misunderstood by those enslaved to structure?
They said “go play in the other room.”
I said “this room has my destiny in it.”
They sighed. I licked the wall and made eye contact.




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