Employee takes 8 brownies from communal tray, coworker considers stopping baking for the office

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  • A person reaches out for oreos sitting on a plate
  • Would I be in the wrong if I stopped bringing homemade food to the office after one person keeps taking portions meant for the whole team?

    I genuinely enjoy cooking and I have a habit of making extra when I bake or prep something on week ends. A few times over the past few months I've brought things in to share a tray of brownies, some cookies, once a big batch of roasted chickpeas because I made way too many. Nothing elaborate, just surplus from stuff I was already making.
  • People seemed to appreciate it, which was nice. Became a casual thing. There's one guy, I'll call him Derek, who works in a different part of the office but somehow always appears within about ten minutes of anything being put in the break room. Fine, that's what the break room is for. The issue is the portion sizes. Last time I
  • brought in a full tray of about 24 brownies, I stepped away for maybe 25 minutes and came back to find Derek had stacked literally eight of them on a plate at his desk. I watched him go back for a second plate later.
  • I didn't say anything because it felt petty to police brownie distribution. But other people had barely gotten any, a few people mentioned it, and one coworker who I know had been looking forward to them missed out entirely. This has happened more
  • than once with different things. He's not doing anything technically wrong, the food is there for anyone. But the unspoken understanding of "communal office food" seems to be completely absent for him.
  • I'm at the point where I either stop bringing things in, or only bring enough for my immediate team and don't put it in the general break room. Would I be the a hole for just quietly stopping the whole thing?
  • A businesswoman eats a sandwich at her desk
  • Commenters gave their two cents on the situation.

    OldLadyKick You need to brin gin a plate and walk around to people at their desks and offer 1-2 to each person with a napkin. This excludes Derek. If he finds out and asks- tell him the food is for your nearby co-workers.
  • anon5381 Leave a note next to it and say "please take one so others can also try" or something along those lines. If it doesn't change leave a note, then in different writing, in a different colour pen write "yeah derek leave some for the rest of us".
  • Due_Cricket1885 Uh you're not obligated to bring anything for anyone so how can you possibly be the Ah le
  • ImpressionKey3094 Just make zip lock bags and message people, that if they want it to stop by your desk.
  • 21stCenturyJanes This does seem like a pretty easy problem to solve. Don't bring in anything or if you do, don't put it in the break room. OP, are you worried Derek will be upset?
  • It's a bad idea, especially for women, to build up an expectation like this (non- work related) in the workplace. That doesn't mean you can never share a treat but when you become "the lady who brings us
  • treats", it backfires either because of people like Derek or because then that's your identity at work. Keep to your team or close friends or don't do it at all.
  • Lostinhighweeds I used to work w a guy like this. If we ever had a potluck, he never brought anything bc he was a man and didn't cook yet loaded up on everything. It was
  • disgusting. He was a high level manager so no one ever figured out a way to get him to stop but often he was the last to know there was food around.
  • Tomaquetona I really hope that you are exaggerating because if you actually saw EIGHT brownies on his desk (1/3 of how many you brought in) and did not take that opportunity
  • to say "hey, uh, the brownies are for everyone and you taking 8 is ridiculous," then you are doing it wrong. It is wholly acceptable to call someone out for taking so much of something from the free food in the break room.
  • If they argue and say "they were just sitting there," then you say "it is fine to pick up whatever is leftover at 5pm, but these haven't been out long enough for everyone to get a chance."
  • If you really can't even stand that tiny amount of confrontation, then I recommend offering whatever you bring in to your immediate coworkers before putting it into the break room, or keeping it near your part of the office instead of the main break room.
  • Professional Yam3119 NTA, but I don't understand why you didn't speak up sooner. Someone has to!
  • guts24601 I bake stuff all the time for my wife and her coworkers. She's had to pretty much police who gets anything because one guy did this in the break room. Now she only gives baked goods to specific people in her office because of one j . NTA
  • Solid-Musician-8476 I'd have stopped him from taking so much in real time. I'd embarrass him. Meanwhile going forward, I'd email the people you want to share with that you have them at your desk. Then you're in control of how much they take. Don't email Derek.
  • MHW93 Put a note beside the treats - - "One brownie per person please so there are enough to go around! Check back at the end of the day for leftovers if you would like a second."

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