After months of anticipation and planning, a couple finally secured a rare weekend getaway in their newly purchased RV, eager to escape the grip of a harsh winter and soak in the tranquility of their favorite lake. Their excitement, tempered by the cold months and limited outings, was a precious promise of freedom and joy, a much-needed break from the daily grind.
Yet, what should have been a simple celebration of togetherness quickly turned tense, as family pressures and unexpected guilt cast shadows over their plans. Invitations turned into ultimatums, and heartfelt hopes for a peaceful retreat were met with reminders of life’s fragility, leaving them caught between the desire for personal happiness and the weight of familial expectations.

AITA for not cancelling my camping trip to go to a family BBQ?







As renowned family therapist Dr. John Gottman explains, “The number one reason for divorce is not sexual incompatibility. It’s the inability to repair after a conflict.” This quote speaks to the larger need for establishing functional repair mechanisms, which begins with clear, respectful boundary setting in all relationships.
The core issue here involves boundary violation driven by emotional manipulation. The SIL is employing a guilt-based tactic—first by suggesting the OP’s primary plans should be canceled if it’s just the couple, and second, by introducing a morbid, guilt-inducing statement about mortality to pressure compliance. The OP reacted diplomatically by offering an alternative weekend, but this concession signals a willingness to negotiate a boundary that should have been firm from the start. The husband’s commitment (time off, reservation fee, difficulty securing the spot) represents a tangible investment that must be weighed against the subjective, emotional demand of the SIL.
The OP’s decision to stick to their original plans is appropriate in this context because the request was unreasonable and involved significant personal cost, while the alternative offered was reasonable. Moving forward, the OP should practice stating boundaries clearly without over-explaining or apologizing. A simple, firm response like, “We appreciate the invitation, but we have an unchangeable commitment for this weekend, as we already booked and planned for the RV trip,” validates the relationship while protecting their established commitment.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.




















The original poster (OP) is feeling conflicted, torn between honoring their established, highly anticipated plans for their new RV and managing the strong emotional demands from their sister-in-law (SIL) to cancel those plans for a family barbecue.
Given the difficulty in securing the campsite and the husband’s time off, is it unreasonable for the OP to stand firm on their weekend trip plans against the SIL’s attempts to force a reschedule based on speculative emotional appeals?







