In the quiet corners of family gatherings, a silent tension brews beneath the surface of smiles and polite conversation. A man, deeply in love with his spouse, finds himself shouldering an unfair burden—expected to pay for dinners not just for two, but for an entire extended family. The weight of financial obligation clashes with the warmth of familial bonds, creating a painful divide where gratitude feels hollow and expectations feel like chains.
Amidst cultural ties and the complexities of blended lives, the man’s generosity is met with entitlement rather than understanding. His spouse’s family, wrapped in their own struggles and dynamics, leans heavily on him, blurring the lines between support and exploitation. This is a story of love tested by unspoken demands, where the cost of togetherness threatens to overshadow the joy it should bring.

AITA: Dinners out with Spouses Family, No One Else Ever Offers to Pay









Dr. Terri Givens, a political scientist and author who has written on cultural dynamics and family roles, suggests that while cultural expectations around gender and finance are powerful, they must adapt when they create undue burden or conflict within a modern partnership. The tension here lies between adhering to a perceived ‘cultural script’ and maintaining individual financial autonomy.
The poster’s discomfort stems from several intersecting factors: the sheer financial magnitude of paying for nine people frequently, the perceived inequity (as the cousin is financially stable), and the lack of meaningful social engagement during these outings. The spouse’s reaction—labeling the poster a ‘jerk’ for complaining in advance—indicates a potential failure in communication and boundary setting within the primary relationship. The spouse appears to be prioritizing conflict avoidance with their family over validating the poster’s legitimate financial concerns, which can create resentment.
From a psychological perspective, the poster is experiencing high levels of emotional labor by shouldering this financial burden while simultaneously feeling isolated by the in-group conversation shifting to Chinese. The behavior of the family leverages a combination of cultural deference and perceived status difference. The poster’s actions of paying were appropriate based on prior precedent, but voicing discomfort privately to the spouse was also necessary. The constructive recommendation is for the poster and spouse to establish a united front. They must discuss and agree upon a new, fair financial boundary for group outings—such as splitting the bill evenly, alternating who pays, or setting a maximum spending limit—before the next dinner occurs, ensuring the spouse supports this boundary against their family’s expectations.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.









And it’s not a gender thing but a Confucian thing.

The younger ones not stepping up makes sense. It must be a financial means situation. Do they choose the restaurant?



The individual faces significant internal conflict regarding a recurring financial expectation imposed by their partner’s extended family. This expectation directly challenges their personal financial boundaries and sense of fairness, placing them in a difficult position between cultural norms they acknowledge and their own reasonable desire to manage personal funds.
Given the pattern of one person consistently covering large group expenses that include financially capable adults, is the expectation for the poster to always pay the entire bill for nine people, including several adults, reasonable, or is this an unfair financial burden that undermines partnership equity?







