Most people keep family photos on their phones.
Vacation pictures. Holiday gatherings. Smiling group shots taken at weddings or birthday parties.
One woman looked at her family history, realized she had almost none of those memories, and came up with a very different solution.
Instead of displaying cherished family portraits, she created a collage of her immediate family’s mugshots and made it her phone lock screen.
The twist?
She wasn’t doing it out of admiration.

Here’s the original post:









According to her, nearly every member of her family had spent years creating chaos, trauma, and heartbreak in her life. The mugshots weren’t just photographs. They were receipts.
While her younger sister admitted the idea was funny, she also questioned whether it crossed a line.
The woman wasn’t so sure.
After everything these people had put her through, a humorous lock screen felt pretty mild by comparison.
Here’s why her unusual family photo album sparked such a strong reaction.
A Family History Unlike Most Others
The story begins with a family that seemed to have a revolving door connected directly to the criminal justice system.
Her older sister had recently been arrested after years of destructive behavior.
According to the woman, the arrest was long overdue.
She described a long history of false reports to law enforcement, drug-related issues, child neglect, theft, and abuse. For years, consequences seemed to miss their target.
Then finally, there was a mugshot.
Her mother, who has since passed away, also had a criminal record. At one point she was arrested for fraud after allegedly writing bad checks from accounts she shouldn’t have had access to.
Her father’s mugshot carried a different kind of pain.
His arrest stemmed from violence directed at her.
She explained that she had attempted to intervene during one of his abusive episodes involving other family members. The situation escalated, resulting in his arrest for battery.
By her account, nearly every close family member had spent years leaving destruction in their wake.
Only she and her younger sister had avoided that pattern.
So when she realized she had mugshots for multiple relatives but very few actual family photographs, a darkly humorous idea appeared.
Why not make a family collage?
Technically, everyone would finally be together in one picture.
Humor as a Survival Tool
To outsiders, turning criminal booking photos into a lock screen might sound shocking.
For people who have survived dysfunctional families, however, humor often becomes something much deeper than entertainment.
It becomes survival.
Psychologists have long recognized humor as a coping mechanism that can help people process painful experiences. According to experts at Psychology Today, humor can help individuals create emotional distance from difficult memories, reducing stress and allowing them to regain a sense of control over situations that once felt overwhelming.
Similarly, researchers discussed by Verywell Mind note that “gallows humor,” the practice of finding comedy in grim circumstances, often emerges among people who have experienced significant trauma or hardship. While it may appear inappropriate to outsiders, it can serve as a healthy psychological tool for managing difficult emotions.
In this context, the lock screen starts looking less like cruelty and more like reclamation.
For years, these family members shaped her life through their actions.
Now she gets to decide how she remembers them.
And apparently, she chooses irony.
The Fine Line Between Funny and Painful
That doesn’t mean everyone would make the same choice.
One of the more thoughtful reactions came from people who grew up in similar circumstances.
Several commenters explained that they couldn’t imagine wanting daily reminders of painful family histories every time they unlocked their phones.
For them, distance was healing.
Looking at mugshots would only reopen wounds.
That’s what makes the story interesting.
People heal differently.
Some create boundaries and avoid reminders altogether.
Others take the very thing that once caused them pain and turn it into a joke.
Neither approach is necessarily wrong.
The important difference is whether the humor helps someone move forward or keeps them stuck in the past.
Only the person carrying that history can really answer that question.

Most commenters thought the wallpaper was hilarious.

![She Turned Her Family’s Mugshots Into a Phone Wallpaper, and the Internet Couldn’t Decide If It Was Brilliant or Brutal [Reddit User] − My sister took a closeup picture of her cat’s a__hole and used that for her ex’s photo on her phone. Every time he’d call to b__ch about...](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/wp-editor-1780803098249-11.webp)

Some applauded the creativity, while others joked that it was fitting because “when the screen is locked, so are they.”




![She Turned Her Family’s Mugshots Into a Phone Wallpaper, and the Internet Couldn’t Decide If It Was Brilliant or Brutal [Reddit User] − It’s only appropriate, when your screen is locked, so are they 😂](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/wp-editor-1780803104785-17.webp)
One commenter suggested the images deserved something even more prestigious than a phone wallpaper.



Family photographs are supposed to tell stories.
Usually those stories involve love, connection, and happy memories.
This one tells a very different story.
A story about survival.
About breaking cycles.
About finding humor in situations that once caused real harm.
Whether the wallpaper is funny or mean probably depends on your perspective.
But one thing is clear.
The woman who created it isn’t celebrating her family’s choices.
She’s reminding herself that despite everything she endured, she ended up on the other side of those mugshots.
And perhaps that’s the most important picture in the entire collage.
What do you think? Is turning family mugshots into a lock screen harmless dark humor, or does it cross a line even when the people involved caused years of pain?

















