**My Husband Brings His Friends Over Every Weekend Without Asking Me**
When I married my husband, I knew he was social. He loves people, loves being the center of attention, loves the energy of a full house. I used to admire it—it made him seem warm and welcoming. But now, it feels like a burden I never signed up for.
Every Friday, without fail, I come home from a long week of work to find two, three, sometimes five of his friends sprawled across my living room. Beer bottles on the coffee table, game controllers in their hands, pizza boxes stacked like trophies. It’s loud, it’s messy, and not once has he asked if I’m okay with it.
At first, I tried to be polite. I’d smile, make small talk, even clean up after them. But after months of this routine, the resentment started to grow. I work all week. I want to come home to quiet, not a frat house.
The breaking point came last Saturday. I had planned a quiet evening—just me, a book, maybe a bubble bath. Instead, I walked in to find his buddies watching a game, shouting at the TV, and my husband grinning like a teenager.
I dropped my bag and said, “Really? Again?”
He barely glanced at me. “Relax, babe. It’s just the guys. You act like it’s a big deal.”
“It *is* a big deal,” I snapped. “This is my home too. Don’t you think you should ask me before inviting half the neighborhood over?”
He rolled his eyes. “You’re being dramatic. They’re my friends. It’s just the weekend.”
Something in me snapped. “Do you realize I plan my week around the hope of peace, and you take that from me every time? I feel like a guest in my own house.”
The room went silent. His friends shifted uncomfortably, suddenly aware of the tension. My husband flushed, embarrassed, but instead of apologizing, he muttered, “You’re overreacting.”
That night, after they left, I told him: “This ends now. If you want to see your friends every weekend, do it at a bar, at their place, anywhere but here. Because if you keep treating this house like your clubhouse, I’ll start treating it like mine—and you won’t be welcome in it.”
His face fell. He finally realized I wasn’t bluffing.
Here’s the truth: marriage is compromise. But compromise doesn’t mean one person gets to invite the world in while the other feels like a stranger in their own home.