Long-planned trips and family time matter, but so do the quiet promises we make at home. When you agree to take time off to care for a partner after surgery, that commitment is more than a calendar note; it’s reassurance during a vulnerable moment.
That’s the heart of this argument. A man booked leave to support his girlfriend through a tonsillectomy and turbinate reduction, then surprised his family with a months-long visit and extended the trip so he’d return after her operation.
Now she faces recovery without the partner who said he would be there, and he thinks she’s overreacting. The situation raises a simple but painful question about priorities, trust, and whether being present when it counts should ever be optional.
A man extends a surprise family visit, missing his girlfriend’s surgery despite promising to be there, and calls her dramatic for being upset
























There’s a gap between what partners promise when schedules are set and what actually happens when surgery and recovery arrive.
The OP booked time off to be present for his girlfriend’s tonsillectomy and turbinate reduction, then extended a surprise family visit so he’d miss the days she’s likely to need help. That mismatch, not the surgery itself, is what has friends and family arguing about who’s being unreasonable.
Adult tonsillectomy recovery is materially different from a child’s. Clinically, adults are routinely advised to plan for 10–14 days of recovery, with the first 48–72 hours often the toughest for pain control, hydration and mobility. Many providers specifically note that adults may need more time and support than children do. Mayo Clinic
Practical warning signs, severe throat pain that can worsen around days three to five, fatigue, difficulty eating, and (rare but important) risk of bleeding, mean a patient needs monitoring and help with medications, fluids and food. Cleveland Clinic
Medical teams routinely tell adult patients: arrange a ride home and plan for someone to help at least the first 48–72 hours, a period when swallowing, pain control and simple self-care are hardest.
Post-op guidance from university health systems and ENT clinics advises rest at home initially and limited activity for up to two weeks. University of Mississippi Medical Center
Beyond the clinical facts, there’s a well-documented psychosocial element: social support from an intimate partner measurably affects recovery.
Research going back decades shows that spousal support can reduce preoperative anxiety, improve pain management and speed functional recovery after surgery; modern reviews continue to find social support buffers psychological stress and aids convalescence.
So how should this specific conflict be read? Objectively, the girlfriend asked for support that clinicians commonly recommend; the OP agreed; then he extended a long family trip that left her without the person she expected.
That sequence plausibly looks like a broken commitment to someone vulnerable in a new town with no local help. Subjectively, the OP underestimates adult recovery from combined airway surgery and values the surprise family visit, creating competing obligations.
Practical advice for both parties: the OP should consider returning for at least the first 48–72 hours or arrange an equally capable caregiver, confirm medication/feeding plans with the surgeon, and communicate honestly with family (surprises are not mandatory).
The girlfriend should request specific, foreseeable help (med schedule, meals, transport) and document the surgeon’s recommendations in writing so plans aren’t ambiguous.
See what others had to share with OP:
These Redditors say OP reneged on a promise and trivialized major adult surgery















This group stresses adult recovery is brutal and calls OP selfish and uncaring















These commenters urge the GF to rethink the relationship and consider dumping OP









So, what do you think? Was OP simply making the most of a trip with family, or did he cross the line and betray a partner in need?







