A mother’s carefully crafted dream of a transformative holiday with her teenage son begins to unravel as unexpected guests and shifting plans threaten to turn their intimate journey into a chaotic group expedition. What was meant to be a special bonding experience teeters on the edge of overwhelm, with new relationships and competing desires pulling everyone in different directions.
Caught between the hope of creating lasting memories and the reality of tangled emotions, the family grapples with the challenge of balancing individual needs against collective adventure. Each addition to the trip stirs feelings of uncertainty and tension, forcing them to confront what truly matters in their quest for connection and understanding.

AITA for saying 1 shower (2 toilets) 8 adults for 1 week is not ok? Am I being unreasonable in saying that this is not realistic (and is in fact a really stupid idea)?

















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a classic conflict where the need to maintain group cohesion (loving the group) clashes directly with the need to protect personal resources and comfort (loving the self). The OP correctly identified the operational strain of inadequate shared facilities (one shower for eight people), which is a legitimate boundary regarding shared living conditions.
The motivations here are complex. The partner’s friends (C and E) seem driven by a fixation on a specific experience (cherry blossoms) leading to an insistence on specific, high-demand accommodations, perhaps feeling entitled due to their early involvement or influence over date changes. The partner (D) appears to be prioritizing avoiding conflict and maintaining the peace within this newly formed extended social unit over enforcing practical standards, even accepting personal discomfort (no showering on some days) to appease others. The OP’s actions—vetoing the poorly planned options and suggesting separate accommodation—were appropriate defenses of her and her son’s well-being and budget, especially after the trip scope expanded significantly beyond the original plan.
The constructive recommendation is for the OP to clearly communicate that the shared financial and logistical foundation of the initial plan is broken due to the expanded group size and preference shifts. She should proceed with the separate accommodation plan for herself and her son, framing it not as punishment or rejection, but as a necessary logistical pivot to ensure their part of the trip is successful and stress-free. Maintaining the relationship with D is possible, but it requires firm, non-negotiable clarity on personal travel parameters.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


















The original poster (OP) finds herself in a difficult situation where the initial group holiday plan, intended for bonding, has become strained by escalating logistical demands and differing financial realities, particularly concerning shared accommodation in Tokyo. Her attempt to enforce a reasonable standard for shared facilities, like adequate shower space, conflicted directly with the strong preferences of the partner’s friends and the partner’s willingness to compromise the OP’s stated budget and comfort levels.
Is the OP wrong for vetoing accommodation options that she believes will cause significant stress due to poor facilities, or is she wrong for making a unilateral decision to split accommodation when the group dynamics were already fragile? Should maintaining group harmony supersede practical comfort limits, especially when financial contributions are unequal?







