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Family Wants Me to Stop Treating My Girlfriend Well Because It Makes Them Look Bad

by Charles Butler
November 27, 2025
in Social Issues

They say comparison is the thief of joy, but sometimes, simple incompetence does the job just fine.

Valentine’s Day is already a minefield of expectations, but one boyfriend managed to set off a nuclear explosion without even being in the room. What started as a frantic attempt to make up for his absence, accidentally resulting in a comical amount of roses, turned into a referendum on effort. While his girlfriend was thrilled, her sisters’ husbands were decidedly less so, having been exposed as… well, less than romantic.

Now, read the full story:

Family Wants Me to Stop Treating My Girlfriend Well Because It Makes Them Look Bad
Not the actual photo

AITA for sending my girlfriend too many valentine's day flowers and making her sisters' husbands look bad?

To explain where I'm coming from here, I need to establish two things:

I have a high-paying job that often requires I drop everything to travel without notice.

It is infuriating at times, but I get paid well so I've learned to live with it.

My girlfriend loves flowers more than anything. We've been together 3 years... and I have always sent 3 dozen roses whenever we would be apart. It's a tradition and we...

Onto the dilemma,  GF got bad news about a family member's health and headed back to her hometown... Her two sisters came back as well with their husbands.

Valentine's day came around... Day of, I got an alert from FedEx of a delayed shipment and panicked - it broke my heart to think she wouldn't get any flowers...

so I called around to local florists and found one who could deliver them for a fee. I sent another gift pack of 3-dozen roses.

Turns out FedEx managed to deliver the original package. GF ended up with 6 dozen roses, 2 cards, 2 boxes of chocolates and a teddy bear.

The next day, I heard from her sisters' husbands. They were FURIOUS with me, saying I made them both look awful.

Turns out one bought his wife a leftover bouquet of half-dead tulips, and the other didn't get his wife anything at all.

My GF ended up sharing her roses with both of her sisters so they all could feel special.

My GF's mom/dad called and explained that they thought I should apologize... because their other daughters' husbands can't [afford to do so].

That's true... but I also never expected them to be such [bad] partners that they thought it would be okay to not even bring their wives flowers on Valentine's Day.

But maybe I'm wrong for holding them to the standard I've set for my own relationship.. AITA?

This story is basically a Hallmark movie script gone wrong, and I love it.

Let’s be real: The OP didn’t make those husbands look bad; their lack of effort made them look bad. If one husband showed up with a single, thoughtful rose and a handwritten letter, nobody would be talking about the 72 roses in the corner. The contrast here isn’t about money—it’s about care.

The fact that the in-laws want the OP to apologize is classic family peacekeeping dysfunction. They would rather drag the high-achiever down to the “half-dead tulips” level than ask the other men to step up. It sends a terrible message to their own daughters: “You deserve less so your husbands can feel comfortable doing the bare minimum.”

And can we talk about the girlfriend? Sharing her roses so her sisters wouldn’t feel left out? She is the MVP of this story. She protected her sisters’ feelings when their own partners couldn’t be bothered.

Expert Opinion

This scenario touches on a concept relationship researchers call “Comparative Relationship Satisfaction.”

According to social comparison theory, people evaluate their own relationships by comparing them to others. Usually, this happens internally. However, when a massive external stimuli (like 72 roses) appears, it forces the comparison into the open.

Dr. John Gottman, a renowned relationship expert, emphasizes that small, consistent “bids for connection” matter more than grand gestures. The issue with the brothers-in-law isn’t that they failed a grand gesture; it’s that they seemingly ignored the bid entirely (one brought nothing, one brought decay). Their anger is likely a defense mechanism known as displaced aggression. Instead of facing their own guilt for neglecting their wives, they project that anger onto the OP.

Furthermore, the parents’ intervention is a textbook example of enabling. By asking the OP to dim his light, they are validating the “learned helplessness” of the other husbands. A healthier family dynamic would involve the parents encouraging the sons-in-law to find meaningful ways to express love within their means, rather than asking the OP to stop expressing his.

Romantic gestures do not require wealth. A handwritten note costs $0. A home-cooked meal costs groceries. The OP shouldn’t apologize for caring, and the in-laws shouldn’t apologize for their husbands’ apathy.

Community Opinions

The internet was remarkably united on this one: Do not apologize for being a good partner.

Sparkism - There's 8 adults in the situation... Four of them are jealous and stole flowers not meant for them... Two of them are enabling the jealousy. Plain and simple....

EidolonVS - The husbands didn't look bad because you have enough money to buy six dozen roses. The husbands look bad because they did sweet [nothing].

Individual-Fuel1177 - Ask her parents why they want you to treat their daughter worse? Why aren't her parents ripping into their Son in laws for treating their other daughters poorly?

HappyHalloqueen - Maybe if they showed love more often than once a year, the wives wouldn't be jealous...

The husbands need to learn you don't need money to do thoughtful and meaningful gestures.

FortuneTellingBoobs - If my sister's partner had 72 flowers delivered to her in front of us, I would think her BF is a sweetie...

My husband would see that, make a silly self-deprecating joke, and we'd all laugh... Your GF's sisters' partners are rude.

Mundane_Bike_912 - Those boys need to learn a lesson in humility. Her parents need to zip it. It is 100% not your problem.

GeekyFreak07 - When I told my work colleagues what my pre teen was giving to their girlfriend... all the guys went out at lunch to get things for their partners...

AffectionateHand2206 - Romantic gestures that only occur on [Valentine's Day] are empty gestures. True romance is not just limited to one day.

pinelogr - It is a good opportunity to apologize with an insult... say something like "so sorry I didn't realise you are such bad husbands, next time I will keep...

Maximum-Ear1745 - What I am hearing is that they don’t want you to ever be so extravagant as it may make others look bad. Ridiculous! You sound like an amazing...

How to Navigate Family Jealousy

So, you are in the doghouse for being too good. It’s absurd, but family dynamics often are. Here is how to handle the parents without being a doormat:

  1. The “Respect” Pivot:
    Do not apologize for the flowers. Instead, say to the parents: “I would never intentionally hurt [Sisters], but I cannot apologize for treating [Girlfriend] the way she deserves. My relationship with her is between us.” This sets a boundary: your romance is not a family committee decision.

  2. The Peace Offering (Optional):
    If you really want to smooth things over with the BILs (without apologizing), you can use humor. Next time you see them, buy a round of drinks and say, “FedEx screwed me, man. I didn’t mean to start World War III.” It diffuses the tension without admitting fault.

  3. Keep It Consistent:
    As one commenter warned, do not just do this for show. Keep treating your girlfriend well in private too. As long as your gestures are genuine, nobody can legitimately criticize you.

Conclusion

Ultimately, this wasn’t just about flowers., but about effort. The OP showed he cared enough to panic, call local florists, and ensure his girlfriend felt loved. The brothers-in-law showed they didn’t care enough to plan ahead.

You can’t buy 72 roses to cover up a bad relationship, but you also shouldn’t have to buy zero roses to protect someone else’s fragile ego.

So, the consensus is clear: NTA. But maybe next year, just stick to the tracking number before ordering double.

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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