A woman’s holiday season took a painful turn after one late-night scroll changed everything. While lying in bed, she came across her husband’s celebratory post about Donald Trump’s election win — and her heart sank.
For Andrea, the result wasn’t just politics. It felt personal. She had already spent the morning unfriending people who supported Trump, trying to protect her peace. But seeing her own husband praise the victory left her stunned, hurt, and unable to speak to him.

Instead of arguing, she sent him a text. She asked him to remove the post “out of respect” for her and her circle of liberal friends. Then she delivered the message that would reshape their holidays: she wouldn’t be attending Thanksgiving, and she wouldn’t be hosting Christmas. She needed distance.
Her husband tried to calm the moment with a quiet gesture — a cup of coffee and a soft “I understand.” Later, they finally talked. Andrea told him she could not sit through another tense holiday like she did in 2016. She refused to spend time in a room full of relatives who voted in a way she saw as harmful and frightening.
She explained that accepting their gifts or passing the holiday turkey would feel like betraying her own values. To her, the divide wasn’t just political — it was moral. And she couldn’t ignore it anymore.
Her husband didn’t push back. He didn’t remove the post, either. The holidays would go on, but for the first time, they would go on separately.