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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:
Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 21:21

godmum56 · 06/05/2026 19:34

well unless he's gay.......

I'm fake and straight. I've been on holiday alone with male friends and never felt the need to shag them if that's what you are implying

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 21:22

godmum56 · 06/05/2026 19:34

well unless he's gay.......

I'm fake and straight. I've been on holiday alone with male friends and never felt the need to shag them if that's what you are implying

Joubert1 · 06/05/2026 21:25

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 21:22

I'm fake and straight. I've been on holiday alone with male friends and never felt the need to shag them if that's what you are implying

Whilst married?

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 21:27

Joubert1 · 06/05/2026 21:25

Whilst married?

Well yes I did actually. And whilst in my current 11 year relationship. Lady year and the year before with 2 different friends. One trip to Asia for a month with one

gamerchick · 06/05/2026 21:30

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 21:22

I'm fake and straight. I've been on holiday alone with male friends and never felt the need to shag them if that's what you are implying

That doesnt usually go both ways though. That's the point. Just because you didn't want to bed them, doesn't mean the same for one of them.

Joubert1 · 06/05/2026 21:30

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 21:27

Well yes I did actually. And whilst in my current 11 year relationship. Lady year and the year before with 2 different friends. One trip to Asia for a month with one

cool

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 21:33

gamerchick · 06/05/2026 21:30

That doesnt usually go both ways though. That's the point. Just because you didn't want to bed them, doesn't mean the same for one of them.

Well I've know both of them a long while. 1998 and 2010) They've not tried yet

Besides it takes 2.

And it's not just the women the OPs husband has invited but her whole family so doubt it's a planned shagfest

Ee872100 · 06/05/2026 21:34

He didn't discuss it with you as he knew you'd say no and he wanted them there. So he's just being selfish.
I hope he's personally paying for the trip, seen as he's turned it into a trip with his friends and not a family trip as planned.

MoltenLasagne · 06/05/2026 21:36

I know this is mostly about your relationship, but it also changes the dynamic for your kids too. My Dad was the one who always invited people to join us on holidays. Either to come away with us, or making friends whilst away and inviting them to dinner with us. He's a more-the-merrier type, but he also spent most holidays entertaining his new pals whilst the rest of us were left to chat amongst ourselves. It made us as kids feel like we weren't fun enough for him and that he was choosing being in the spotlight over being Dad.

Franjipanl8r · 06/05/2026 21:38

Realistically, I doubt he would uninvite them even if I asked, because neither of us would want to damage the long lasting friendship over this.

Why on earth would you damage the friendship by your DH saying he’s very sorry but he jumped the gun and actually you all want to go just as a family to have some special memories just for you?

There’s a difference between avoiding confrontation and being a total doormat. He arranged something without asking you and now you know and don’t agree, he needs to un-arrange it. No confrontation needed, just an open conversation and showing you the respect you deserve.

Substance · 06/05/2026 21:41

I wonder if OP will update us? I'm on tenterhooks.

TheZanyScroller · 06/05/2026 21:45

Your husband is a CF. You're paying for the holiday you should get a say also as to who/who doesn't tag along.

The fact he didn't ask your opinion before making the decision for both of you, is out of order.

I would say to him he needs to univite his friends unless he pays for the holiday instead because the plan for this safari holiday is for family because it's a special trip.

asdbaybeeee · 06/05/2026 21:50

I’d sit down with him and ask him genuinely would he be fine if you invited your friends along with out checking with him?
It’s really disrespectful of him to dismiss you like that.

Nogimachi · 06/05/2026 21:51

researchers3 · 06/05/2026 09:34

Of course yanbu and something is quite wrong in your relationship if you're doubting yourself.

It can be fun to go away with others - when it's discussed and mutually agreed.

He's trampled allover your boundaries and showed a lack of respect. I note he hasn't invited your best friend.

My ex H was like this, always wanted to be with others, we were never enough for him. Eventually he left me for someone else, funnily enough, one of his 'best' friends!

This is such a good point - he invited his best friend without asking if hers wanted to come!
Also I am old and cynical but - female best friend? Pull the other one. Unless he’s quite effeminate - I’ve known men who essentially had chosen to live straight have best female friends. Otherwise I really haven’t known any men with female best friends except massive flirts who were unfaithful to their wives (admittedly only 2-3 but enough for me to not trust them.)

JadeMonkey · 06/05/2026 21:54

Franjipanl8r · 06/05/2026 21:38

Realistically, I doubt he would uninvite them even if I asked, because neither of us would want to damage the long lasting friendship over this.

Why on earth would you damage the friendship by your DH saying he’s very sorry but he jumped the gun and actually you all want to go just as a family to have some special memories just for you?

There’s a difference between avoiding confrontation and being a total doormat. He arranged something without asking you and now you know and don’t agree, he needs to un-arrange it. No confrontation needed, just an open conversation and showing you the respect you deserve.

Absolutely this. There would be nothing wrong with him explaining to them that he’s really sorry but he jumped the gun and it’s actually going to be a trip just for your family this time. He can say “this time” and imply there might be another time if that makes him feel better or like it’s softening a potential blow: it doesn’t have to be true. Explain that you (meaning BOTH of you, not just pinning it on you) really want some quality time together by going on this special holiday just as a family of 4.

If I was the completely platonic best friend who’d been invited along in this scenario, I would absolutely understand and there would be no hard feelings or weirdness.

MargolyesofBeelzebub · 06/05/2026 21:59

If they are good friends, she would understand if he uninvited her. It's not even that difficult a conversation "Look, I was so excited about the trip, I invited you without consulting Squirrel first. When I told her you were coming, she had said the whole point was to spend time as a family making memories. It's completely my fault for inviting you, I'm so sorry! You could always go the week after and we'll give you tips on the best places to go!"

blueshoes · 06/05/2026 22:10

Nogimachi · 06/05/2026 21:51

This is such a good point - he invited his best friend without asking if hers wanted to come!
Also I am old and cynical but - female best friend? Pull the other one. Unless he’s quite effeminate - I’ve known men who essentially had chosen to live straight have best female friends. Otherwise I really haven’t known any men with female best friends except massive flirts who were unfaithful to their wives (admittedly only 2-3 but enough for me to not trust them.)

This.

His best friend who happens to be Female. Of course. Nothing to see here.

Greeninjudgment · 06/05/2026 22:11

Everything has been said but I wanted to add that, initially, I wondered if he had just got carried away in the moment - I can see how that might happen - but, after your last post, that is definitely not the case. He sounds manipulative and selfish, trying to put the responsibility on you for your (very reasonable) reaction and not on him for his blunder (and that is being charitable).

I don’t see the solution to be him paying, as it means he is likely to contribute less elsewhere to the household, and he still gets his own way. It's not primarily about the money (though I get it makes it worse) but about being a team.

Like others on here, I think something feels off here
Not that he has a female friend but that they are so enmeshed and you seem to be the bystander.

CliantheLang · 06/05/2026 22:12

Substance · 06/05/2026 21:41

I wonder if OP will update us? I'm on tenterhooks.

She'll be back in 2 years asking us if it's OK to spend the fortune she's saved for that 'once in a lifetime vacation' on a good divorce solicitor.

Feis123 · 06/05/2026 22:15

Is he trying to recreate the vibe of 'Out of Africa' with his best 'friend'?

Stopbeingadoormat · 06/05/2026 22:16

Franjipanl8r · 06/05/2026 21:38

Realistically, I doubt he would uninvite them even if I asked, because neither of us would want to damage the long lasting friendship over this.

Why on earth would you damage the friendship by your DH saying he’s very sorry but he jumped the gun and actually you all want to go just as a family to have some special memories just for you?

There’s a difference between avoiding confrontation and being a total doormat. He arranged something without asking you and now you know and don’t agree, he needs to un-arrange it. No confrontation needed, just an open conversation and showing you the respect you deserve.

This. There is no friendship at all if the woman he's invited along with them isn't able to understand it wasn't his place to offer that invitation without prior discussion and cheerful and full agreement from his wife and family, who come first.

If his "friend" gets upset about this they were never a friend at all.

Stopbeingadoormat · 06/05/2026 22:17

MoltenLasagne · 06/05/2026 21:36

I know this is mostly about your relationship, but it also changes the dynamic for your kids too. My Dad was the one who always invited people to join us on holidays. Either to come away with us, or making friends whilst away and inviting them to dinner with us. He's a more-the-merrier type, but he also spent most holidays entertaining his new pals whilst the rest of us were left to chat amongst ourselves. It made us as kids feel like we weren't fun enough for him and that he was choosing being in the spotlight over being Dad.

Yep, her kids have a right to have a nice family holiday minus some woman and her family in their space day and night.

SethBrogan · 06/05/2026 22:29

Stopbeingadoormat · 06/05/2026 22:17

Yep, her kids have a right to have a nice family holiday minus some woman and her family in their space day and night.

Exactly. The kids aren’t even the same ages which makes a big difference. Unfortunately based on her updates the OP is prepared to spend the next few years saving and taking on even more of the financial burden so her husband can spend more quality time with his “best friend”.

SethBrogan · 06/05/2026 22:32

blueshoes · 06/05/2026 22:10

This.

His best friend who happens to be Female. Of course. Nothing to see here.

This might be controversial but my friend always says that men never waste resources. Whether that’s time, money, attention, whatever. There is always an end goal. Female best friend being invited on the family’s once in a lifetime trip? Pull the other one.

Thechaseison71 · 06/05/2026 22:34

SethBrogan · 06/05/2026 22:32

This might be controversial but my friend always says that men never waste resources. Whether that’s time, money, attention, whatever. There is always an end goal. Female best friend being invited on the family’s once in a lifetime trip? Pull the other one.

Female best friend AND her husband and kids.

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