AITA for leaving Christmas dinner after my uncle wouldn’t stop making “jokes” about me being unemployed?

Why do family gatherings sometimes bring out the worst comments from relatives? One man faced repeated jabs about his job situation during a holiday meal, despite trying to keep things light.

People often expect holidays to stay peaceful. After politely asking his uncle to stop and getting dismissed, he chose to leave early, sparking backlash from his mother who felt he caused unnecessary awkwardness.

‘AITA for leaving Christmas dinner after my uncle wouldn’t stop making “jokes” about me being unemployed?’

The evening started normally enough, with the man making an effort to contribute and enjoy the family time.

30s male here. I’ve been out of work for a bit and I’m actively looking, doing interviews, all that. It’s not a secret, but I also don’t really want it...

We had a family Christmas dinner this weekend. I went, brought a bottle and dessert, was polite, helped clear plates, tried to just get through it.

The mood shifted when his uncle began targeting him with repeated remarks throughout the night.

My uncle (50s) started with the usual “so when you getting a real job then” type comments. I did the normal laugh-it-off thing and said I’m on it. He kept...

Stuff like “must be nice having a permanent holiday” and “maybe Santa can bring you a CV” and “you should try working instead of sitting on that computer”. People laughed,...

After the 4th or 5th comment I said, calmly, “can you drop it, I’m here for dinner not to be roasted.” He replied something like “oh come on it’s just...

Afterward, family reactions focused on his departure rather than the uncle’s behavior.

Now my mum is saying I embarrassed her and I should’ve just ignored him because “that’s how he is” and it made things awkward for everyone.. I think he can...

ADVERTISEMENT

The central issue involves repeated disrespectful comments disguised as humor during a family event. The uncle persisted despite clear discomfort, while others remained silent, normalizing the behavior and pressuring the target to endure it.

The man sought basic respect by setting a boundary, only to face dismissal and family criticism. The uncle may rely on “banter” to assert dominance, while relatives avoid confrontation to keep peace. This dynamic often enables ongoing insensitivity, leaving the targeted person feeling isolated.

Psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner states in The Dance of Anger (1985) that “When we allow others to treat us badly without consequence, we teach them it’s acceptable.” Her work highlights how excusing poor behavior as “just how they are” prevents change and burdens the victim.

ADVERTISEMENT

Effective approaches include private conversations with supportive family members about the impact. Limit exposure to toxic dynamics by skipping events or leaving early when needed. Practice short, firm responses like “I’ve asked you to stop” without engaging further. Prioritize self-respect over forced harmony.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Social media users strongly backed the man’s decision to leave, calling out the uncle’s bullying and the family’s enabling attitude. The overwhelming consensus placed blame on the relatives who stayed silent.

Many highlighted how “that’s just how he is” excuses bad behavior and praised the man for standing up for himself.

ADVERTISEMENT

Odd-End-1405 − "That is how they are" is enabler language for your feelings don't matter. She is embarrassed? Why, she has a child with a spine who won't put up...

A joke, fine, when asked to stop, you stop. You don't stop, it is disrespect. Good luck on the job hunt. NTA

RayEd29 − "That's how he is" - and that's supposed to make it okay? Well, tell you what mum, not putting up with crap like that is "just how I...

ADVERTISEMENT

Neither_Pear4669 − The 'that's just how he is' tells me everything i need to know. Sounds like he's a jerk and your family has chosen to just tolerate it for...

Consistent-Star5745 − NTA. If "that's how he is," he should stop being invited until he's able to behave appropriately in a social setting. People need to stop giving a pass...

ntermation − Its interesting she chose to say you made things awkward and defended your uncle. I wonder how it would be if instead she told the uncle he made...

ADVERTISEMENT

Others criticized the family for not defending him and suggested stronger boundaries or reduced contact.

jerseygirl414 − NTA. He sounds like the family bully and like people let him get away with it to "get along". Good for you for walking out.

AlvinOwlHirt − NTA. He was rude and unhelpful. You politely asked him to stop. He didn't. You did not embarrass anyone. Your uncle did. And I am very disappointed that...

ADVERTISEMENT

MindlessGooner34 − Definitively NTA. Your mum, uncle, and everyone else who laughed at his "jokes" are the assholes. Anyone without a job who's currently looking knows how expensive it is...

Your mum was "embarrassed" that you did the smart thing and exercised restraint by leaving, but she wasn't embarrassed for not defending you from remarks by her brother to make...

I'd be looking at going no contact, or refusing to attend any family functions you can avoid.

ADVERTISEMENT

ApprehensiveCut9809 − NTA, but the adults of his generation should have stopped him like his wife or his sister (your mom? ).

The old "that's how he is" happens because no one tells the young man who bullies everyone to stop it when he's doing it in his teens, then 20s, 30s,...

habner70 − NTA. If my brother was giving my son s__t about not having a job, I would call him out on it. I definitely wouldn't take his side over...

ADVERTISEMENT

Several commended his mature handling and offered encouragement for the job search.

West_House_2085 − "I think he can **** himself. " covers it. NTA edit thumb spelling

TopEssay6045 − NTA. I don't understand how your Mom is embarrassed, and why she doesn't care that your uncle was trying to embarrass you. Feels like these people are not...

ADVERTISEMENT

Anyway, you handled it maturely - asked your uncle to lay off, he didn't, so you removed yourself from the situation. ETA: Good luck with the job hunt; a lot...

Familiar_Shock_1542 − NTA What a jerk. Someone there should have stepped up and told him to drop it.

PDK112 − NTA. "that's how he is". Tell your mom that is how you are. You have too much self respect to be disrespected and made the brunt of Uncle's...

ADVERTISEMENT

CarelessDistance1478 − NTA. You proved you were the most adult person in the room by leaving without further comment. Bravo!

Family traditions often come with unspoken rules about tolerating rude relatives for the sake of harmony. This incident reveals that protecting personal dignity matters more than avoiding momentary awkwardness, especially when requests for respect go ignored.

Would you stay and endure repeated jabs to keep the peace at a holiday gathering? Or is walking away the healthiest way to handle a relative who refuses to stop?

ADVERTISEMENT
Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *