AITA for not respecting my husband’s culture?

A married woman finds herself at odds with her husband after his parents arrive for an extended visit and expect her to serve them daily. She works full-time, owns the home through her grandparents, and is the sole breadwinner while her husband is unemployed. Despite this, she is criticized for not fulfilling the role of a “dutiful daughter-in-law.”

The conflict escalates when her husband asks her to make more effort to impress his parents, leading to a heated argument involving threats of divorce and citizenship accusations. What started as a seemingly stable marriage is now under strain, leaving her questioning whether this dynamic is temporary or a sign of deeper incompatibility.

‘AITA for not respecting my husband’s culture?’

The conflict began during a visit from the husband’s parents.

My husband is Indian and I’m white. We live in a house provided by MY grandparents. He has his citizenship because of me. His parents came to visit and it’s...

For some reason they think after I work a whole week I should come home and cater to them because that’s what I should do.

Tensions rose as financial and cultural expectations collided.

My husband is currently laid off work on unemployment and I’m not. It finally came to a head last night over dinner and he asked me if I just could...

We got in a huge argument and I said I could always divorce his son and tell the courts he’s using me for citizenship because that’s how I feel and...

My husband argued with me about it and I told him to try me because he is unemployed and we have only been married under two years.

The ongoing stress pushed the poster toward drastic decisions.

I have no desire to be bullied by his parents and wait on them while they are vacationing with me. I was told I was disrespectful and they have no...

ADVERTISEMENT

I’m this close to divorce because the last two weeks that they have visited have been hell and I’m stressed. Up until this point we had a great marriage but...

Edit: I will be staying with my parents until I figure out what to do. I don’t want to be burden in this position while working fulltime. My grandma who...

Some of the comments woke me up to this isn’t likely going to change on his part towards his family and I don’t want to financially support someone who sees...

ADVERTISEMENT

At the core of the issue is an imbalance of labor and expectations. The wife is financially supporting the household while being pressured to conform to traditional gender roles she never agreed to adopt. From her perspective, the demands feel less like cultural respect and more like unpaid domestic servitude, especially while she is working full-time.

On the other side, the husband appears torn between loyalty to his parents and partnership with his spouse. His request for her to “try harder” suggests an expectation that she should adapt rather than a willingness to mediate or shoulder responsibility himself. This creates resentment and undermines the sense of teamwork necessary for a healthy marriage.

The most concerning element is the use of citizenship status as a weapon during conflict. While it reflects deep frustration, it escalates the argument into dangerous territory and risks eroding trust permanently. The broader social issue here is whether cultural traditions should override consent, fairness, and mutual respect in modern relationships.

ADVERTISEMENT

See what others had to share with OP:

Many users strongly sided with the poster, emphasizing fairness and practicality.

[Reddit User] − Nta ! This isn't respecting culture it's patriarchy and sucks (signed an Indian 58 yo woman)

lmchatterbox − NTA. You didn’t sign up to be breadwinner and housewife. S__ew their traditional gender roles.

ADVERTISEMENT

squirrelsareevil2479 − NTA. Talk to your husband about his desire to become an American citizen. Explain that means he also has to respect American culture, he can't take the benefits...

You will be civil and polite to his parents but he must be firm that they treat you with respect. What is culturally correct in India will not happen here.

When he is not working, he is the one to take care of his parents. If he can't accept this, then seriously consider if you want to continue in a...

ADVERTISEMENT

Ok-Context1168 − NTA. I get that it's cultural to cater to the in-laws but YOUR HUSBAND IS NOT WORKING! He can cater to his parents, if he's so inclined.

I'd be damned if I'm working full-time and then playing the "best hostess DIL" after work for *weeks* at a time. Oh, hell no.

Some commenters offered more balanced perspectives while still acknowledging her frustration.

ADVERTISEMENT

KronkLaSworda − Tell them that you wear the pants in the family and he's a lazy house-husband that doesn't do near enough chores.

he should be catering to his own parent since you have to keep the bills payed. Then go outside with a whiskey and a cigar. That should shock the hell...

WhoNurse1978 − NTA But if your marriage has been fine up until their visit do you really think that he just married you for citizenship? Or were you just saying...

ADVERTISEMENT

Because if that’s the case you guys really need to get counseling and work on how you communicate. As far as this situation goes no you should not wait on...

neoncactusfields − ESH - threatening your husband with deportation is really, really s__tty. He's being really s__tty too by demanding you fall in line with incredibly sexist expectations that you...

You could try couple's counseling instead of making nuclear threats like this. If you don't want to try and makes things work in a healthy manner, you can of course...

ADVERTISEMENT

BUT** if you go to a judge and say your husband was just using you for citizenship (which isn't true based on your acknowledgement that you had a great marriage...

victoriaramonah − ESH Your husband's parents are extremely disrespectful of their DIL, your husband is unemployed, traditionalist and seems unempathetic to your situation,

and you're using the threat of citizenship status to get them off your ass. I do feel bad for you here but wow, what a mess.

ADVERTISEMENT

A few users used humor to cut through the tension.

sunset-tx-armadillo − NTA -Only you can decide if you are willing to put up with the “dutiful DIL” crap the rest of your life. Also realize that one day your...

You are supporting him and all your living expenses and he still wants you to “respect his parents”. Hell no! Good luck-you are REALLY gonna need it.

ADVERTISEMENT

QuinGood − NTA This isn't going to change. His attitude is that you (the breadwinner) must also observe the gender roles of his cultural background.

Tell him to get off his b__t and get a job. Set a time limit - if he's still unemployed, go see an attorney and shut this sham down. Good...

This story reveals how quickly unresolved cultural expectations and financial stress can fracture a marriage. While the poster feels cornered and unsupported, her response also raises questions about communication and escalation during conflict.

ADVERTISEMENT

Should cultural traditions be adapted when circumstances change, or should partners compromise regardless of fairness? How should couples navigate family pressure without turning on each other? Readers are invited to share where they would draw the line and what they believe respect truly looks like in a modern marriage.

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

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