In the quiet storm of shifting traditions and unyielding work demands, a woman’s love for her family is tested like never before. Thanksgiving, once a warm gathering at her home, now feels like a distant memory overshadowed by the relentless hours of a new job, forcing her to sacrifice her presence and peace for the sake of duty.
Amid promises of understanding and the hope for shared moments, she faces the harsh reality of being overlooked and burdened, as plans are made without her voice and expectations mount beyond her capacity. Her struggle is not just against time, but against the silent erosion of the cherished bonds she holds dear.

AITA my husband is angry I won’t come to my MIL’s for Thanksgiving









As renowned psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner explains, “Boundaries are about what is acceptable or not acceptable for you. Boundaries are not about controlling the other person; they are about teaching people how to treat you.” In this scenario, the OP’s professional obligations established a boundary regarding their availability, which the family, particularly the husband, failed to respect when rescheduling the event.
The motivation driving the scheduling conflict appears rooted in a dynamic where the OP’s needs (exhaustion from two back-to-back 11-hour shifts, including the holiday) are secondary to maintaining a traditional event time. The husband volunteered the OP to cook the turkey, compounding the physical and time demands without fully acknowledging the resulting stress. When the OP expressed uncertainty about attending, the husband reacted negatively, suggesting a lack of validation for their very real constraints. This pattern points toward poor communication and an imbalance in shared responsibility within the marital unit regarding family obligations.
The OP’s actions—expressing doubt about attending—are appropriate reactions to an unreasonable set of demands. However, to handle this constructively next time, the OP should establish firm boundaries regarding major commitments *before* the MIL makes final plans, ensuring the husband understands that work commitments override informal scheduling changes. Future planning requires collaborative negotiation, not unilateral volunteering by the spouse.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.
























The original poster (OP) is caught between professional obligations requiring long work hours during Thanksgiving and family expectations, particularly those set by the mother-in-law (MIL) and husband. The central conflict arises because the family event time was changed without considering the OP’s non-negotiable work schedule, leading to feelings of exhaustion, resentment, and a belief that attending would be pointless.
Given that the OP cannot change work commitments and the established family time conflicts directly with their mandatory schedule, is the OP justified in feeling that skipping the event is the only logical outcome, or should they prioritize attending briefly despite the guaranteed exhaustion and missing the main meal?







