AITA (and my husband) for recommending my SIL gets Botox?
Navigating family dynamics can be tricky—especially when beauty advice gets mistaken for an insult. One woman found herself caught in a skincare scandal after a well-meaning suggestion about Botox turned into a family fallout. Now, she’s wondering if honesty really was the best policy.
In this Reddit AITA post, a woman explains how she and her husband, both open users of Botox, offered cosmetic advice to her sister-in-law after she asked for skincare tips. But when they mentioned Botox might help with her frown lines, things took an unexpected turn. Accusations of being “rude and disrespectful” soon followed—and now, the couple finds themselves at the center of an unexpected vanity war.
‘AITA (and my husband) for recommending my SIL gets Botox?’
This is a textbook case of “asked and answered” gone wrong, but the underlying issue is more than just Botox—it’s about boundaries, sensitivity, and self-image.
According to Dr. Chloe Carmichael, clinical psychologist and author of Nervous Energy: Harness the Power of Your Anxiety, people often ask for advice as a way to seek validation, not necessarily to receive objective feedback. “When someone says ‘What’s your secret?’ they may just want to hear something flattering or relatable—not a reminder of what they haven’t done.” In this case, the sister-in-law may have expected product recommendations, not a cosmetic procedure suggestion.
What makes this interaction especially volatile is the contrast in beauty values. The OP and her husband are proactive in their aesthetic care and embrace treatments like Botox. The sister-in-law, on the other hand, has openly criticized such practices in the past. That clash in values created a foundation of tension. When OP mentioned frown lines—even gently—it likely touched on an insecurity Anne hadn’t fully processed.
Beauty and aging are deeply personal. Dr. Vivian Diller, author of Face It, writes that “when people feel left behind in the beauty race, even neutral comments can feel like criticisms.” So while OP and her husband believed they were offering a helpful insight, the delivery (and Anne’s own emotional readiness) made it feel like a judgment.
The takeaway? When someone asks for advice, it’s important to gauge what kind of advice they’re actually ready to hear. And if you’re the one asking, be clear about what you want—honesty, reassurance, or something in between. Because even well-intentioned truths can sting if they land in the wrong moment.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Let’s take a look at how Reddit responded to this not-so-glamorous fallout.
Reddit was split—some said honesty is fine when advice is solicited, while others argued that calling out frown lines crosses the line, even unintentionally.
So, was the Botox suggestion rude—or simply misunderstood? This story brings up a larger conversation about body image, beauty norms, and how even helpful advice can hurt when it touches a nerve. One thing’s clear: in family dynamics, it’s not just what you say, but how (and when) you say it. What would you have done? If a family member asked for skincare advice, would you have mentioned Botox—or stuck to the basics? Share your take in the comments!