The user has hosted Thanksgiving dinner at their home for the last five years, an experience that has shifted from enjoyable to som**hing they dread due to their family's behavior.
The core problem is not the preparation itself, but the family treating the user's home as a complimentary hotel for several days surrounding the holiday.
Family members, including the user's brother's children who create messes, a sister who offers no help, and a mother who micromanages and criticizes, have consistently failed to show respect or offer a*sistance.
After a particularly frustrating experience last year, the user announced in September that they would not host this year and suggested rotating locations or going out, leading to immediate pushback and pressure from the family, leaving the user now doubting their decision as the holiday approaches.












Get the latest stories delivered to your inbox.
The user is currently caught between recognizing the long-standing unfair burden and lack of respect shown by their family during past hosting duties, and the intense emotional pressure from their relatives who insist hosting is their duty.
The central conflict lies between the user's need for a break and self-respect versus the family's expectation that the user should sacrifice their peace to maintain the tradition in their home.
Should the user uphold their boundary to protect their well-being, risking the collapse of the traditional Thanksgiving plans, or should they concede to the familial pressure to avoid conflict and perceived blame for ruining the holiday?
A Wave of Opinions Just Hit the Thread:
The thread exploded with reactions. Whether agreeing or disagreeing, everyone had something to say — and they said it loud.