AITA that I don’t want to go to my mother-in-law’s house every single Sunday?

A husband grows increasingly frustrated with his wife’s strict routine of spending every single Sunday at her mother’s house from morning until bedtime. He joins her most weekends to stay close as a couple, but the long hours exhaust him, especially since their opposite work schedules already limit their shared time. What makes things more difficult is his lack of respect for his mother-in-law, whom he sees as self-serving toward others, and the passive-aggressive comments she makes whenever he skips a visit.

The tension reached a new level when he chose to celebrate his own mother’s birthday instead of joining them. His wife opted to stay with her mom rather than attend the lunch, highlighting a clear imbalance in how each spouse prioritizes family. This ongoing pattern leaves him questioning whether his needs in the marriage are being fairly considered.

‘AITA that I don’t want to go to my mother-in-law’s house every single Sunday?’

The husband has tried to make the weekly visits work, but the toll is becoming too much.

So I'd consider myself a loving husband and we have a mostly good relationship. There are quirks to it, but it's fine with me.

But one big quirk is that she goes to her mom's house religiously on Sunday's like a born again Christian going to church, except she is there all day.

Like she wakes up, heads out, and stays all day until it's time to sleep. I go with her most times just to spend time together but it's honestly exhausting...

She's alright to me, she is just not a good person to other people. Very self serving and I can't respect her for it. Let alone do I want to...

Even when he skips occasionally, the backlash lingers.

I've vocalized that I would rather us stay home or just do something together. But she's very defensive over spending the day with her mom.

Fine...but I work nights and she works days, and we have different days off... So I like to spend Sunday days with her so that we can help make the...

Now, the 10% of the time that I don't go, I always get something in return from the mom. Like a "oh he must not love me or something!" Kind...

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The breaking point came during a family birthday conflict.

But the way she has a grip over her daughter, my wife, I think in her head she's being serious about it. I'm sick of it. I'm sitting in my...

and I spent lunch with my mom for her birthday. My wife didn't want to go to lunch for my mom's birthday...would rather hang out with her mom...fine.

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This story reveals a classic case of mismatched family priorities straining a marriage. The husband demonstrates significant effort by attending 90% of the Sunday visits despite his discomfort, yet he receives little reciprocity when it comes to his own family. The wife’s defensiveness and her mother’s manipulative comments suggest an unhealthy enmeshment that places the mother-daughter bond above the marital partnership.

Opposing perspectives might argue that maintaining weekly time with aging parents is a valid and caring choice, and spouses should support each other’s family obligations to some degree. However, the complete lack of flexibility—especially refusing to join his mother’s birthday celebration—shifts the dynamic into unfair territory. Healthy marriages require both partners to negotiate shared time, particularly when limited schedules already create scarcity.

From a broader social viewpoint, this pattern reflects how unaddressed parental influence can quietly erode couple intimacy and mutual respect. Without boundaries, resentment builds, and future milestones like having children could intensify the imbalance. Many similar situations improve through honest conversations or professional counseling to redefine priorities and protect the marriage as the primary unit.

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Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many users strongly support the husband, praising his patience while criticizing the lack of compromise from his wife and mother-in-law.

_bigkahuna − Not the a__hole. Your wife’s definitely an a__hole for not going to your moms birthday dinner. Maybe check out r/justnomil , seems like a you have a MIL...

TidyNova − Not an a__hole. I would say this doesn’t sound too bad on her part, but then you mentioned that she wouldn’t make time to celebrate your mother on...

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She’s the a__hole here. Her behavior sounds selfish and destructive to your marriage if you’ve explained your feelings to her and she doesn’t care.

Boomstick86 − Nope. She is.

2monkeysandafootball − She's the one not trying to meet you halfway. I'm in somewhat of a similar situation, with the work hours part, and we pre-plan our time together. If...

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[Reddit User] − Your wife has to realize, it is grow up time

Others offer a more balanced view, recognizing family loyalty while still urging the wife to adjust.

[Reddit User] − Your wife is way out of line, I would be apeshit if my boyfriend expected me to spend the very little free time we have together with...

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If she works nights and you work days, she needs to pick a night during the week to move this to.

Reddywhipt − Not the a__hole. I think wife needs to grow up, and your /r/justnomil needs to let her child live her life.

I have 3 adult children, and to be honest, it would weird me out if they wanted to hang out with dad one day EVERY weekend.

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I'd be wondering what I did to make them that needy. Don't get me wrong... I love my kids and I *really* enjoy their company. They're all awesome people.

I just had my 21yo son come spend most of the last week with me, and we all went to sushi one night the week before that. They are always...

ShoegazingStardust − Not only is your wife the a__hole, but the way she treats you isn't much different than the way her mother treats her. Her mother speaks and your...

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A few comments bring humor or blunt directness to lighten the discussion.

mydogcharl1e − My dude. .. Definitely not the a__hole. You are going way out of your way to accommodate them and honestly your wife and her mother sound like selfish...

marking_time − Yeah, not the a__hole. I hesitate to call your wife the a__hole because she's been indoctrinating by her mother to "be there" for her. But then again I'm...

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My husband and I ended up in marriage counseling because I had a similar relationship with my mother. I used to bend over backwards for my mother, agreed with everything...

Luckily I knew it. I would spend all my time doing as she said and hating it. Our marriage counselor said that I was having an emotional affair with my...

It took a lot of work and physical separation (from my mother, not hubby and I) as well as a big scene where I stood up to my mother like...

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I don't know whether your wife is ready to commit to changing the unhealthy relationship with her mother, but it's definitely unhealthy.

She should be willing to choose spending her husband over her parent in this situation. Her mother should have moved on in her life to some extent after your wife...

That's what healthy parents do. One thing that I would like to warn you about is having children with your wife. She would likely choose her mother over them as...

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Mum always comes first. Look up enmeshment. My mother has also spent a lot of time putting my husband down subtly to me. It's part of what brought on our...

I just had to learn how to recognise her manipulation and change the subject. I hope this helps you, and I really hope that you can both get into marriage...

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This post highlights the quiet struggle many couples face when one partner’s family routine overshadows shared marital time. The husband isn’t trying to cut off his wife’s mother entirely; he simply wants a fairer balance that respects their limited overlapping free time and honors both sides of the family equally.

What do you think is reasonable—should one day a week be permanently reserved for in-laws, or is it fair for couples to negotiate fewer visits when work schedules make couple time scarce? Have you ever dealt with a similar “every Sunday” family expectation, and how did you and your partner find middle ground?

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