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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel disappointed my husband invited friends on our “trip of a lifetime”?

702 replies

SleepySquirre1 · 06/05/2026 09:23

Recently paid the deposit for what feels like a once-in-a-lifetime family holiday to Kenya for a safari. Our two kids are absolutely animal obsessed and honestly so am I, so this has been a dream of ours for years.

It’s going to involve a LOT of saving, sacrifices and cutbacks over the next year or two. I’m the main breadwinner and I know I’ll be working incredibly hard to make it happen, so in my head this trip became this really special “core family memories” holiday for the four of us.

Last night my husband announced the “good news” that he’d invited his best friend, her husband and their children to come too, and they’re apparently joining us. Their children are slightly younger than ours but they all get on really well. For context, I genuinely really like them, they are good fun and we’ve had lovely shorter breaks together before.

I think part of what has upset me is that there was absolutely no discussion with me beforehand. It was presented as a done deal rather than something we decided together, which has made me feel a bit blindsided if I’m honest.

But instead of feeling excited, I just felt… flat. Sad, almost. I think because in my mind this was meant to be something really special for our little family. I love spending time with just my husband and with my husband and kids, whereas he’s much more of a “the more the merrier” type person.

And now I feel awful even admitting this, but some of the excitement has gone out of it for me to the point where part of me almost wouldn’t mind if the holiday didn’t happen at all. Which sounds dramatic considering it’s going to be such an amazing trip.

I know we’ll still have a lovely time and I know I sound ungrateful. But part of me feels disappointed that these big memories the kids look back on won’t just be ours.

AIBU to feel upset by this? Or am I being unfair because he just sees holidays differently to me?

OP posts:
BurntBroccoli · 06/05/2026 18:38

Not surprised you are upset. I wouldn’t feel comfortable at all and not able to just be myself.

beasmithwentworth · 06/05/2026 18:42

Yes that’s out of order - the bit discussing it with you first? What would you Jane said if he had thought to ask you? No presumably (completely understandable) . Maybe that’s why he didn’t ask or as you say he genuinely didn’t see the holiday in the same way as you and is a ‘more the merrier’ type.

As a side note though - I may be alone here but expressions such as ‘core family time’ and ‘our little family’ make me cringe so in my opinion you are BU for that, but only that.

VividPinkTraybake · 06/05/2026 18:46

Someonesawu · 06/05/2026 09:29

How on earth can you see his side?

Indeed....such an obvious one sided post that one wonders what the point is

Duvetdayneeded · 06/05/2026 18:50

Wow, your dh is a dick!!

NarnianQueen · 06/05/2026 19:02

The fact your dh has a female best friend is a massive red flag 😩

but honestly that isn’t something I’m worried about at all. I completely trust him. He’s known her as long as he’s known me and she genuinely is probably his closest friend.

and none of the above is reassuring in any way!

He didn’t ask you first because he wanted it to be a fait accompli. He was asking her along whether you wanted her or not - He knew you’d prefer it to be just your family so that’s why you weren’t consulted.

i have a bad feeling about this whole thing…

Appledrop · 06/05/2026 19:04

He is clearly prioritizing this so-called friendship over you and your children, which likely signals a troubling pattern in his behavior. If you've only put down a deposit for the holiday, why not cancel it? Suggest that your husband go with his friend, using his own hard-earned money to pay for it. This way, you can plan a special trip for yourself and the kids. It’s time to reclaim some control back and make it clear that this behavior will no longer be accepted. Do not waste your hard-earned money or compromise your mental health on someone who doesn’t prioritize you and your family, let alone someone who doesn't even have the decency to talk to you first.

Rachelshair · 06/05/2026 19:12

I wouldn't be working hard to facilitate my husband prioritising his friend over me. He uninvites them or no holiday. It looks like he couldn't face spending that time only with his family- I'd be really upset and it would make me reconsider our relationship. Do you get any time as a family or is his mate always there?

Substance · 06/05/2026 19:13

The issue is not whether your children might enjoy the trip more if their friends came along. Nor whether it might be fun if you all head off on holiday together. The issue is your husband not conferring with you before inviting the other family. That is not normal, not acceptable. It is unkind and demeaning to you. Tell him this clearly - no tears or drama.

godmum56 · 06/05/2026 19:13

NarnianQueen · 06/05/2026 19:02

The fact your dh has a female best friend is a massive red flag 😩

but honestly that isn’t something I’m worried about at all. I completely trust him. He’s known her as long as he’s known me and she genuinely is probably his closest friend.

and none of the above is reassuring in any way!

He didn’t ask you first because he wanted it to be a fait accompli. He was asking her along whether you wanted her or not - He knew you’d prefer it to be just your family so that’s why you weren’t consulted.

i have a bad feeling about this whole thing…

oh me too.

Substance · 06/05/2026 19:14

Appledrop · 06/05/2026 19:04

He is clearly prioritizing this so-called friendship over you and your children, which likely signals a troubling pattern in his behavior. If you've only put down a deposit for the holiday, why not cancel it? Suggest that your husband go with his friend, using his own hard-earned money to pay for it. This way, you can plan a special trip for yourself and the kids. It’s time to reclaim some control back and make it clear that this behavior will no longer be accepted. Do not waste your hard-earned money or compromise your mental health on someone who doesn’t prioritize you and your family, let alone someone who doesn't even have the decency to talk to you first.

Edited

^This^

Joubert1 · 06/05/2026 19:14

@SleepySquirre1 seems so passive about it because I’m guessing that this kind of selfish and twatty behaviour from her husband is quite a routine event.

Imdunfer · 06/05/2026 19:16

Joubert1 · 06/05/2026 19:14

@SleepySquirre1 seems so passive about it because I’m guessing that this kind of selfish and twatty behaviour from her husband is quite a routine event.

Sadly this is my guess too.

Joubert1 · 06/05/2026 19:16

So as it stand @SleepySquirre1 , the sum total of your response was a “look”.

That was immediately dismissed by your husband and the conversation changed subject.

You have a serious communication problem (amongst others) with your husband.

TowerRavenSeven · 06/05/2026 19:21

Tell him you and the kids aren’t going if they are, and since you’re paying the bulk of it he can pay for it too. Or, alternatively, call the other family, and say, ‘ “John” spoke out of term, this is a family vacation and he didn’t discuss it with me. I’m sorry but we can’t go together” so there is 100% no misunderstanding. I’m livid on your behalf!

NoisyViewer · 06/05/2026 19:22

The truth is if you get on well and the kids are good together it will probably be even better. The kids will have others and you can have someone to chat with over dinner and a glass of wine. I would ask how the offer came about. Could it be he was telling them and they sort of jumped on it or did he ask? I would say please ask me before doing that again. But if she sort of invited herself it may not be all his fault

Mumtobabyhavoc · 06/05/2026 19:24

How can you possibly damage a long-standing friendship by saying,

"Emma, I messed up. This holiday was meant as a special one for our family. I didn't discuss extending the invitation to you with @SleepySquirre1 and I've created a bit of a mess. I'm sorry I jumped the gun inviting you and hope you understand we're planning this just for us."

Good friends would understand.

ETA
must agree with a few posts just before mine - it sort of rings, There were three of us in the marriage..." 😔

tripleginandtonic · 06/05/2026 19:24

I think yabu. The memories will probably be better, the more the merrier if they get along.

Applecup · 06/05/2026 19:25

With respect stop being so wet and letting him walk all over you. Tell him you are pissed off. Tell him you will be the one working hard to earn the money for this trip. Stop making excuses for him. Sounds like he treats you like shit.

PinkEasterbunny · 06/05/2026 19:26

Mumtobabyhavoc · 06/05/2026 19:24

How can you possibly damage a long-standing friendship by saying,

"Emma, I messed up. This holiday was meant as a special one for our family. I didn't discuss extending the invitation to you with @SleepySquirre1 and I've created a bit of a mess. I'm sorry I jumped the gun inviting you and hope you understand we're planning this just for us."

Good friends would understand.

ETA
must agree with a few posts just before mine - it sort of rings, There were three of us in the marriage..." 😔

Edited

Absolutely this.

godmum56 · 06/05/2026 19:27

NoisyViewer · 06/05/2026 19:22

The truth is if you get on well and the kids are good together it will probably be even better. The kids will have others and you can have someone to chat with over dinner and a glass of wine. I would ask how the offer came about. Could it be he was telling them and they sort of jumped on it or did he ask? I would say please ask me before doing that again. But if she sort of invited herself it may not be all his fault

The TRUTH is that the OP is paying for this holiday and her husband should not have invited anyone without discussing it.

The TRUTH is that the OP wanted to chat with her husband not interlopers
The TRUTH is that if somebody jumps on this , the absolute very LEAST you do is say "I will need to discuss it with my wife"

I despair, I really despair

godmum56 · 06/05/2026 19:29

Mumtobabyhavoc · 06/05/2026 19:24

How can you possibly damage a long-standing friendship by saying,

"Emma, I messed up. This holiday was meant as a special one for our family. I didn't discuss extending the invitation to you with @SleepySquirre1 and I've created a bit of a mess. I'm sorry I jumped the gun inviting you and hope you understand we're planning this just for us."

Good friends would understand.

ETA
must agree with a few posts just before mine - it sort of rings, There were three of us in the marriage..." 😔

Edited

This

WimpoleHat · 06/05/2026 19:29

He's presumably had to have fairly detailed conversations with her because it's a big expensive thing to do, not just something to be arranged over text. He purposely hasn't told you that he's talked to her about it.

@DinoDoughnut81 makes a bloody good point here. This isn’t a case of “we’re going to the King’s Arms for lunch on Sunday - why don’t you all join us?”. This is a big deal that will have required some serious discussion in the run up.

Whysnothingsimple · 06/05/2026 19:30

God! Holidaying with friends is my idea of hell, I can’t switch off! I’d be telling him to either uninvite them or pay for it all!

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 19:32

SethBrogan · 06/05/2026 09:36

I hadn’t even noticed that his best friend is the woman in the other family group. Yeah that is worse OP. I think he was waiting until you’d booked it before telling you. I’d be furious.

Why is the fact his friend a woman any different?

Yeah id be pissed off I wasn't asked but then again my favorite trips are alone so I don't have to put up with others " wants"

godmum56 · 06/05/2026 19:32

WimpoleHat · 06/05/2026 19:29

He's presumably had to have fairly detailed conversations with her because it's a big expensive thing to do, not just something to be arranged over text. He purposely hasn't told you that he's talked to her about it.

@DinoDoughnut81 makes a bloody good point here. This isn’t a case of “we’re going to the King’s Arms for lunch on Sunday - why don’t you all join us?”. This is a big deal that will have required some serious discussion in the run up.

yes indeed.