4-year-old kept roasting her aunt with each comment targeting her deepest insecurities: 'Why are your arms so squishy?'
Kids will always say the most savage things without any hesitation. Whether it's our appearance, our lives, our jobs, or even the most bizarre, unexpected thing you could imagine, they notice everything. Instagram user Leila Gorstein (@lolgorstein) often receives some of these jabs from her 4-year-old niece. The little girl's roast during every visit, and each comment only gets worse, with more specificity, creativity, and humor. Sharing the hilarious video on Thursday, April 16, 2026, the woman revealed how her niece never held back and just went all out, leaving her jaw-dropped.
Addressing her aunt as "Lala," the little girl had some new life-altering questions for her at every visit, which the woman compiled in a clip. She first asked why she never had kids, to which she grew speechless. The kid further asked her why she did not have a job, to which she told the four-year-old she would get a job when she found one. Each question made her ponder life in a hysterical way. The little girl was also curious as to why she treated her dog like her own kids. When the woman tried to explain that the dogs were like her kids because she was looking after them, the 4-year-old replied, "Do your dogs turn into kids?" leaving the aunt puzzled once again. In the caption, she joked, "When your 4-year-old niece says your worst insecurities out loud."
According to a study published by Harvard University, children inherit their brutal honesty through trust built by adults around them. The study noted that children who were given an opportunity to be themselves and not shunned for being genuine are often seen to be truthful and never cheat or lie. Going by the young girl's savage comments, it's clear that her family has been allowing her to express herself freely. Gorstein's video went viral for all the right reasons, and many users shared their thoughts on it.
@emma_maae shared, "I work with kids, and I've come to realize they ask if we have kids because they correlate our love and care to the love and care they get from their parents, and they're just curious where your little ones are. I've come to think that I'm just a safe place, just like home, and I now take it as a compliment." @that_old_frog wrote, "I worked with k-6th graders, and I have never been more attacked than them. 'Why don't you have a boyfriend?' Because I don't want one, and I don't have to have one to be happy. (Me trying to teach independence) 'Oh... That sounds like something someone who can't get a boyfriend would say. My cousin is really nice, you would like him,' a 4th-grade boy. @cootsiess commented, "Oh, her parents are talking about you."
For more fun and hilarious videos, follow @lolgorstein on Instagram.