logo
This Woman's Mother-In-Law Is Saying She Needs Therapy For Being Upset About A Comment Her Fiancé Made About Her Body, And Here's Why People Are So Upset

This Woman's Mother-In-Law Is Saying She Needs Therapy For Being Upset About A Comment Her Fiancé Made About Her Body, And Here's Why People Are So Upset

Buzz Feed07-03-2025

Let's get into another juicy Am I The Asshole thread from Reddit. Today, user u/Upstairs_Garden2353 is wondering if she went too far in postponing her wedding. Here's why:
So, u/Upstairs_Garden2353 recently explained that she has a noticeable scar on the side of her neck. The scar has been there for over six years, and no one has ever said anything negative to her about it...until now.
She shared, "My fiancé would make comments about my scar and make it seem as flirting, for instance, complaining he has kissed every part of my body, except my neck because of the scar, and how the scar 'looked like a kid messed up such a great art' (referring to my look), etc. I told him I didn't appreciate it, even if he was using the scar to be flirty with me, but he insisted he loved me anyway."
However, just as the wedding was nearing, u/Upstairs_Garden2353 delayed it. "A few days ago, my fiancé and I and (my future) in-laws were talking about the wedding — about how we're going to finally be married. My fiancé laughed and said, 'I'm marrying you minus the scar.'"
As you can imagine, she was taken aback by the comment. "I was stunned when he said that, especially in front of his family. I was upset, so I got up and walked out of the room. We had a big fight and he kept saying I was being a drama queen and that he said 'nothing wrong.'"
Then, when u/Upstairs_Garden2353 told her fiancé she wanted to postpone the wedding because of his comment, she said he called her "crazy." Then his mom got involved: "His mom said that I'm obviously 'traumatized' by my scar because I would let it ruin my marriage with her son, and she suggested therapy. She told me that the scar was the issue, not her son, who loves me as I am and chose me to be his wife."
Now u/Upstairs_Garden2353 is feeling "horrible" and wondering if she was right in delaying the wedding. "Am I overreacting? My girlfriends have previously said that my fiancé shouldn't even be bringing up the scar like that."
Here is what the people of Reddit had to say in response to her question:
"NTA. I want to marry you, but my scar does not."
— u/NixKlappt-Reddit
"The fact that they're making it sound like he's doing you a FAVOR by marrying you even though you have a scar is the HUGEST red flag. Who TF comments on someone's scars like that? For THIS LONG?!"
— u/punkinbunz
"He got his mom to gaslight you. I bet this isn't his only constant douche move in your relationship..."
— u/Cute-Profession9983
"Rather than postpone it, I would call it off. Clearly, you deserve better than this jackass and his family."
— u/FloMoJoeBlow
"NTA. That's hurtful, disrespectful, and calling attention to something that is very much a part of you in a negative way. When you love someone, you do so not despite the things that make them unique but BECAUSE of those things. I'd venture to say that scar has shaped how you feel about yourself, the world, relationships, etc., and contributed to the woman you are today."
— u/AdExpensive1624
"Why is he so OBSESSED with the scar? I would seriously think again about marrying this idiot."
— u/Lucky-Effective-1564
"'He loves you anyway?' Fuck that. NTA, but you will be if you marry this sphincter. Dump his ass and his family. You can do SO much better than this shallow, abusive loser. Thank goodness this came to a head before you were legally entangled. In a couple of years, you can refer to this incident when somebody posts one of those 'What's the biggest bullet you ever dodged?' questions on Reddit."
— u/onaplinth
Well, I think it is unanimous that this guy needs to be dropped. We don't know if u/Upstairs_Garden2353 will cancel the wedding altogether but she did say this: "Thank you for your comments...I feel like he has let me down because he, of all people, shouldn't be commenting on my scar. I thought he meant well, but now? I feel like it's deliberate, but for what purpose? I have no idea."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How do you get kicked off ‘Love Island' before the love begins? Yulissa Escobar shows us
How do you get kicked off ‘Love Island' before the love begins? Yulissa Escobar shows us

Los Angeles Times

time15 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

How do you get kicked off ‘Love Island' before the love begins? Yulissa Escobar shows us

Want to succeed in reality show love? It might be best to keep your public life free of racial slurs. 'Love Island USA' contestant Yulissa Escobar, whose use of the N-word on a couple of podcasts surfaced over the weekend before the show's rocky premiere Tuesday, was there and then gone in a heartbeat. A mere blip in love-competition TV's continuum of smokin' hot contestants. She used the N-word casually and naturally in conversation, per video posted on Reddit and TMZ. She did not appear to be using it with disparaging intent — but the word is still racist on its face. 'They're gonna get cancelled so bad and not like I care but they should be protecting them from mass cancellation like this by not casting them in the first place,' one Reddit user said. Plus, Escobar had been partnered on the show with contestant Ace Greene, who is Black. Here's how that selection went, according to Vulture: 'The last to choose is Yulissa. I get the sense that someone once called her a 'real firecracker' and she's been trying to live up to that ever since. She has clearly been waiting for an opportunity to cause trouble, so she aims her lips directly at Ace and they lock in. This goes on for a while.' Before 'Love Island USA' even premiered, fans and haters on social media were making plans to vote Escobar off as fast as they could. But the show beat them to it. 'Welcome back to 'Love Island USA,'' narrator Iain Stirling said 18 minutes into the second episode of Season 7, which streamed Wednesday. 'Yulissa has left the villa.' No other details were given. 'I can confirm Yulissa has left the villa,' a representative of the show told The Times on Thursday. No other details were given there either. So viewers are left to connect the dots on their own — but seriously, those are some pretty huge, flashing-neon dots. Nobody needs that kind of attention, right? At least nobody in the reality TV business does. The process to audition for 'Love Island USA' seems fairly intense, with applicants asked off the bat for their social media usernames and quizzed as to whether they have an OnlyFans page or have ever done porn (sorry, they call it 'Adult Film'). The casting company also wants to know whether prospects have ever cheated on anyone, the location and meaning of any tattoos, whether they have any celebrity friends and whether their parents are still together. There's also this: 'Is there any other information we should be made aware of concerning your application (including anything in your past that may attract negative press or publicity)? If YES, please provide details.' Looks as if Escobar didn't think her language was going to elicit negative publicity? But hey, Greene — who does have tattoos! — is now free to find fresh talent from among his remaining cast members. As for that rocky premiere, 'Love Island USA' fans got heated Tuesday when streamer Peacock posted on social media one minute after the planned showtime, 'WE GOT A TEXT! Tonight's episode will be slightly delayed. But it is worth the wait ... Stay tuned!' A full 40 minutes later, Season 7 got underway.

Rick Astley's No. 1 hit has a billion Spotify streams, 38 years after its release: It's 'something I never dreamed of'
Rick Astley's No. 1 hit has a billion Spotify streams, 38 years after its release: It's 'something I never dreamed of'

CNBC

timea day ago

  • CNBC

Rick Astley's No. 1 hit has a billion Spotify streams, 38 years after its release: It's 'something I never dreamed of'

Rick Astley was just 21 years old when he recorded his 1987 hit, 'Never Gonna Give You Up.' It spent two weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, and charted for 24 more weeks. At age 27, he retired from recording music, with no clue that his song would see a resurgence among millennials and Gen Zers decades later. Astley's song joined Spotify's "Billions Club" on Monday, surpassing 1 billion streams on the platform. "I never could have imagined back in 1987 that 'Never Gonna Give You Up' would still be going strong decades later," Astley, 59, said in a statement, according to USA Today. "Thanks to streaming platforms, a whole new generation has been able to discover music like mine. Reaching 1 billion streams is something I never dreamed of and to everyone who's ever listened, thank you." Astley's retirement wasn't permanent: He released a studio album in 2005, and has released three more since 2016. But his song's modern popularity is more due to "Rickrolling," an online bait-and-switch prank where someone is tricked into watching the song's music video through a misleading first learned about Rickrolling in 2007, when his friend emailed him a YouTube link that brought him to his own music video, he told Vice in 2022. Today, the music video has at least 1.6 billion views on YouTube, and "Never Gonna Give You Up" has stayed relevant enough to be certified five-times platinum in the U.S. It's unclear exactly how much money Astley has received from the online phenomenon, with streaming services, distributors and music labels rarely publishing exact payout rates. The singer himself may not care: "I've never even tried to find out what was actually made from the YouTube hits. I've never really thought about it," he wrote on Reddit in October 2016. Astley was already financially comfortable when he retired at 27, he told ITV's "This Morning" on October 28. More recently, he was paid "a chunk of money" to sing "Never Gonna Give You Up" at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2008, and in a 2015 Virgin Mobile commercial, he wrote on Reddit. "I have been paid well twice, for rickrolling," Astley wrote. Astley's early retirement was prompted by burnout, he told ITV. He felt so consumed by the business of music that he rarely enjoyed the feeling of being a musician, he said. "I was going to America to do a big TV show in New York, and I developed a fear of flying," said Astley. "I didn't want to get on planes anymore, which is hard to be an international pop star if you won't fly." His music-making hiatus gave him a relative degree of off-stage anonymity that he's since embraced, he told Vice. "I've done way more gigging in the last 15 years than I did when I was famous. I'm a lot happier than when I was having my hits," said Astley. "It's kind of perfect because, even though I've just sung for 10,000 people, and they've sung most of the words back to me … when I go to the bar, one person might recognize me. Sometimes none — it's amazing."

People Are Sharing Their "Rare" Phobias, And It's Actually Super Fascinating
People Are Sharing Their "Rare" Phobias, And It's Actually Super Fascinating

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

People Are Sharing Their "Rare" Phobias, And It's Actually Super Fascinating

Reddit user nitin_is_me recently asked people to share their "rare" phobias that others often don't believe they have. Here are some of the phobias folks shared: 1."Kosmemophobia. It's a phobia of wearing or touching jewelry or small, intricate metal things. For me and probably most others with this phobia, it's not really a fear but more of a strong dislike of being in contact with, or sometimes even seeing, jewelry. Small, dangly things are the worst offenders for me." —Downtown-Assistant1 2."I had a friend who's afraid of inflated party balloons, which I learned about the hard way. One time, for my birthday, my girlfriend at the time had arranged for my housemate to let her and two friends in, and they spent a few hours blowing up balloons and filling my bedroom. The next day, my neighbor (the friend in question) asked me about the surprise my friends left in my bedroom. I told her to go check. She screamed and ran back home crying, which I did find odd. It wasn't until an hour later that her boyfriend called me out for making her go into a balloon-filled room. Only after I looked very confused did he ask if I knew about her phobia. I did not." —uitSCHOT 3."Stickers, but in particular, fruit stickers. I will vomit sometimes just from having to touch one to throw it out. I usually use a folded-up napkin to pick them up so I don't have to touch them. Sometimes my husband leaves them around, and it makes me so anxious." —riverwheel 4."My brother is terrified of butterflies. He says it's something about the way they move. He found out when we went through a butterfly house at a theme park. They wouldn't let him go back out the entrance, so he was army crawling and sobbing through the whole place. It's super irrational. He's shoved his girlfriend into the street to get away from them, and he'll jerk his car out of the way." —dumplingdoodoo 5."Large human statues like the Statue of Liberty. It's a form of megalophobia. I can't even look at photos of them, and I'm not enjoying writing this." —Roots_Manuka 6."Ketchup. The smell of it makes me physically gag and almost throw up, and the thought of it touching my skin makes me incredibly anxious, but it's a widely loved condiment, so I try and deal with it — usually by spraying my hands with perfume and covering my nose when in fast food places." —Fantasydreamer2450 "I have a phobia of ketchup. I'm not sure why, but ever since I was little, it was beyond just not liking it. I have had full-blown panic attacks because it touched my food. Even if it was on one fry that someone else ate and it didn't touch anything else, I cannot manage. I will refuse to touch the plate. I may start hyperventilating near it, so my boyfriend no longer eats it around me. If I know he's eaten it, I can't kiss him for the rest of the day. I'll feel like there's still some on or around his mouth. Even knowing it was near him makes me think twice before hugging him because what if some ketchup got on him and now it's touching me?" —nocomment413 7."Hair. I know it's strange. I'm disgusted and so freaked out by hair that's not attached to someone. I can't touch my own hair out of the drain without some layers of paper towels. A pube or leg hair in the bathroom from my husband makes me want to puke. Random hair in a public sink? I'll have nightmares about it that night." —macaron1ncheese 8."I have a fear of buttons, as in clothing buttons. However, not a fear of buttons that are attached to clothes, more like random, unknown buttons. If I touch them, it causes me to gag and sometimes vomit. I believe it's called koumpounophobia. I've had this reaction since I was a small child. In kindergarten, they used to have a cookie tin full of buttons for crafts. I couldn't touch them." —delroy13 9."Dead insects. I never kill so much as a mosquito with my bare hands. I can kill very small moths with a shoe or a vacuum cleaner now because we had three invasions of these pests: they ate my clothes (twice) and my food (once). But if there is a dead insect of any kind on my desk, I have to leave the room. If there is a vacuum cleaner available, on a good day, I can vacuum them. But I can't touch them with the tube or watch the moment they are sucked into the cleaner. We cohabited with a wasp's nest in our bedroom a few years ago. I can live with the living ones; I dread the dead ones or the ones fighting death and dying in front of me." —Hornkueken42 10."I can't deal with anything eye-related. I can't use contacts or put in eye drops. I have to look away if others are doing it. Even watching my girlfriend put on make-up gets me. I can watch gory horror scenes, but the second eyes are involved, I'm a total baby." —Pissed_With_A_Boner 11."Anything man-made in water. I can't go to a swimming pool because of drains, ladders, those floating things that separate lanes, etc. I won't go in the water near a pier, bridge, or boat. Even if someone put a plastic chair in a pool, I'd get panicked." —Jadeinda 12."Escalators. I had a traumatic experience on one, and I still have a physical anxiety response when I get on a fast-moving downward escalator. I thought it would go away over time, but 20 years later, it hasn't subsided." —Karenins_Egau Related: People In HR Revealed Truly Unhinged Reasons Employees Got Fired, And My Jaw Is On The Floor 13."I've had bouts of casadastraphobia, which is an irrational fear of falling into the sky, especially at night. It's worse if I'm lying on my back. Yes, I know it's impossible, but it's very similar to the fear of vertigo if you look down from a tall building. It sucks." —Killybug 14."Teeth. I like brushing my own teeth; I can't stand NOT having clean teeth, but anything involving others' teeth or anything scraping on my teeth (I HATE cleanings at the dentist, it's like nails on a chalkboard) sets me right off. When I was a kid, I also hated the sensation of having loose teeth. As soon as a tooth wiggled even a little bit, I'd pull it right out. The memory still makes my skin crawl, and the clicky squelch sound…" —BabaTheBlackSheep 15."I'm mycophobic. I will cry and scream if I have to touch a mushroom in the outdoors or clean out something with mold. Especially those pancake-looking mushrooms on trees, or the weird ones that look like ears, or the jelly ones, ones that look like nets…NO. The only ones I can tolerate are clean, cut mushrooms from the store. And ONLY certain kinds. I'm still not a fan of eating them, though." —chanyeol2012 16."Agrostophobia is a fear of grass in general. I'm only afraid of TALL grass, but that's the closest way to define my fear, I think. I absolutely cannot force myself to walk through an area where the ground cover of any kind is taller than the shoes I'm wearing. It freaks me out. I'll go a mile around the long way to avoid walking through a 20-foot patch of it." —Exotic-Blacksmith-56 17."Dinosaurs. When I was around 5, I had untreated anxiety. One night, while having an anxiety attack, I went crying to my parents to soothe me. When I walked into the TV room, they were watching Jurassic Park, right at the scene with the T-Rex in the rain. I watched in stunned, anxiety-riddled silence as the T-Rex ate the guy in the toilet. If that hadn't cemented a lifelong fear of dinosaurs in me, a very similar thing happened maybe a year later, but with Godzilla." —MentallyPsycho 18."Bellybuttons. Seeing one isn't a problem, but seeing one being touched...I'm really not comfortable even writing this." —MicroCosno Related: 15 Times Someone Bravely Took A Photo Of The Very Worst Design This World Has Ever Seen 19."My husband's so scared of snakes that he can't even look at a picture of one. When he's going to see a movie, he will wait until someone he knows has seen it and ask them if there are any snakes in it, so he knows if it's okay for him to go. He's currently playing an Indiana Jones game on his Xbox, and I've had to offer to play through the bit with snakes for him because he's stuck there." —tiptoe_only 20."Deep water that I can't see the bottom of. The ocean is fine as long as I can stand it, or the water is clear, and I can see the reef. Any kind of lake or lagoon where I can't see? Fuck that. Also, any kind of outlet, grate, or anything underwater. Those jets in the pool that spray water out? Nope. The grate where water is sucked into the filtration system? Fuck no. The hole in the side of the pool where the pipe goes through? I don't go near that side of the pool at all. I even get the absolute creeps if my foot touches the spot in the hot tub where it sucks the water in." —puzzledpilgrim 21."I have a fear of tall staircases with spaces between the steps or ones that wind so that you can look over the rail and see straight down. It's not heights. It's stairs — any stairs where you can see through them. So there's a tower in this state park we go to where you can see through the slats the whole way up, and I can't do it. Or if I force myself to go up, I can't get down." —Hedgehog_Insomniac 22."Cockroaches. My heart rate jumps, and I hyperventilate and panic. I won't even go into a room if there's one. Even a picture scares me." —Illustrious_Hand_03 23."Blimps. I've never met anyone else afraid of them. They are terrifying, and I will start to shake, cry, and have a full-on panic attack. I've never been in one or seen one up close, but at one point, my local airport had one for like a week or two. I was in the garden, saw it, and ran for cover. It was so weird! They will not have one again! I can safely say that because I work as a safety manager for said airport. I will do everything I can to never have one here again!" —Imagra78 24."Goats. I know it's a weird phobia, but their eyes are terrifying. Their horizontal pupils scare the living s@#t out of me. It's an irrational fear. I've scuba dived and met octopuses with similar horizontal eyes, and I wasn't afraid. But somehow, goats are terrifying. I can't explain it." —Pretend_Analysis_359 25."Talking into phones, radios, speakers, etc. I don't know what it is. It seemed to develop around the age of 18, when I would burst into tears if a phone rang and nobody immediately answered it. Through constant exposure, I've managed to mostly get over it. I still feel uncomfortable and stressed, but I can deal with it now. I always keep my phone on silent, though." —Sajiri 26."My sister is deathly scared of lizards. Her heart rate rises, she panics, starts kicking things, and runs away. She won't calm down for hours." —Even-Construction-10 27."Mascots or people in similar costumes. My parents would drag me to see the Easter Bunny or Santa, and I would be SOBBING. Even still, my fight or flight response kicks in when I see a mascot or something similar." —xscapethetoxic 28."Cats! For as long as I can remember, they've always given me the heebie-jeebies. I get along fine with kittens, but larger cats…nope! I know some people who absolutely adore their cats, and I understand why. They're lovable animals. That's why I don't talk about my phobia much. If someone asks whether I'm a dog or cat person, I always say dog and rarely explain why I don't like cats. Most people don't realize how deeply terrified I am of them. Everything about cats scares me — how soft they are, their hissing, the way they slither against you, even the sounds they make. Whenever I'm around one, my heart rate skyrockets within seconds. I often just hope and pray that it doesn't come near me, fearing it will pick up on my anxiety and approach for that very reason. Internally, it's much worse than I let on. I struggle with this fear and always have, far more than anyone might realize from the outside." —pearlsandposh 29."Mirrors at night. I cannot have mirrors in my bedroom for this reason." —Demonicbunnyslippers 30."I'm not sure I'd call it a phobia, but wind turbines really freak me out. I get a sense of impending doom the closer I get to one, and I get a cold shiver down my back. I have no idea why." —lpar00197 31."Driving. I don't know what it is, but every time I try, I am guaranteed to have a full-on fight or flight meltdown where I'm sobbing and feel like I can't breathe. It just feels like TOO MUCH and TOO FAST. I don't know what to focus on, but you have to focus on EVERYTHING. I can't tell if I'm too far over in the lane. I have to focus on that while focusing on speed, if someone is trying to merge, if I'm trying to merge, when I need to slow down, if someone else is driving unsafe nearby, if a person is walking in front of my car in a parking lot, or if someone is crossing the street when they shouldn't be. Then I have to make sure I don't lose focus on literally everything and space out while driving a death trap on wheels." —dollkyu 32."Emery boards. I assume it started as a texture thing (there are a lot of things I can't touch, like pottery) and progressed. Folks think it's hilarious. I've had folks leave them lying on work keyboards or taped to gifts. It's embarrassing because I know how irrational it is." —Mammoth_Geologist917 33."I have a huge phobia of getting my blood drawn. Needles don't necessarily bother me, as I have eight piercings and have no issue getting shots, but the idea of a needle going into my vein and taking my blood makes me faint." —MacheteAndMeatballs 34."Chalk. I can't stand the feeling, the texture, the dust, or the sound of it being used. I can't touch it or be near it." —Froggirl26 35."Driving through a car wash. I'll be a passenger, but being the one to drive through it causes panic." —Key-Wallaby-9276 36."Revolving doors and getting trapped or otherwise injured while travelling through one. Like, what if the bag I'm rolling through gets sucked under and then I fall and it squishes half my body? Or my coat/sweater/shirt gets trapped in the side, and I slowly get run over by the side of the door? Or it comes up too quickly behind me, hits me in the back, and I fall? Etc., etc., etc." —Aromatic-Cook-869 "I am genuinely terrified of shower drains. I don't know if it's an established, known phobia, but they're horrifying. I always feel like if I look down one, there will be an eye staring back at me. They make me so paranoid." —bri_2498 Do you have an extreme yet uncommon phobia? Tell us about it in the comments or share anonymously using this form. Also in Internet Finds: Tattoo Artists Are Sharing The Tattoos They Felt REALLY Uncomfortable Doing, And I Have No Words Also in Internet Finds: 23 People Who Tried Their Best, But Crapped The Bed So Bad Also in Internet Finds: "I've Worked In Various Prisons. I Will Take A Men's Over Women's Any Day Of The Week. Shit Is Scary": Former Female Inmates Are Sharing Their Most Disturbing Prison Experiences, And My Jaw Is Literally On The Floor

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store