A woman who revealed that she secretly understood her in-laws’ harsh criticisms in their native German is being backed online after sharing her story.
The original poster (OP), u/Sea-Rip-9749, took to Reddit to explain the moment she, after months, revealed her knowledge of German to her insulting in-laws. She ended the post by asking if she was in the wrong for her revelation.
Since the post was published, it has received 24,000 upvotes. Newsweek spoke to relationship educator Fereshta Ramsey about the tense situation and how it unfolded.
In the post, the OP wrote that things with her in-laws began to unravel after she and her husband, Peter, moved from Canada to his home country of Germany. After his family made disparaging remarks about her in German, assuming she couldn’t understand, she confronted her husband early on about his family’s unkind behavior. He said he would address the issue with his family.

A woman and her mother-in-law argue. A post on Reddit has gone viral after a woman revealed to her in-laws that she could speak German, the language in which they had been discussing her.
fizkes/Getty Images
For a while, things were quiet—until the OP gave birth, and her in-laws didn’t like her daughter’s name.
“For a while I didn’t visit my in-laws. I didn’t want to hear them talk about how I shouldn’t have named my daughter Lilith,” the OP wrote. “But yesterday we saw them again…As soon as we showed up, things started to go badly.”
The OP said that the insults resumed during dinner, with her sister-in-law calling her “a fat, ugly hokey addict” in German. It was the last straw for the OP.
“I turned to my [sister-in-law] and [mother-in-law] and told them off in German,” she said. “I basically said that I have always known what they have said about me. The table instantly blew up. People were yelling at me because apparently this was all my fault. I left with Peter, and we haven’t talked to them since.”
The Reddit community rallied behind the woman. One commenter, u/WatchingTellyNow said: “Do they really think you wouldn’t learn the language of the country where you live? They have been extremely rude to you and about you.”
Another user, u/Aestro17 apologized that the OP married into a family of “a******s” and noted how the in-laws deflected blame to avoid accountability for their harsh words.
An Expert Opinion
The story resonated with Fereshta Ramsey, a relationship educator at The Relationship School, who told Newsweek that the OP’s outburst seemed to simply be “a symptom of being in a difficult dynamic.” Ramsey said that dysfunctional family patterns often take years to change, and that the woman had likely reached a breaking point.
“Setting boundaries isn’t always niceties and perfect communication,” she said. “Sometimes it’s saying, ‘I understand what you’re saying, and it’s not OK.'”
The OP’s decision to call out the bad behavior after months of enduring it silently was viewed as a bold move by commenters. Many agreed that while the family’s reaction was unjustified, the real issue lies in their lack of respect and failure to take responsibility for their words.
Ramsey emphasized that what is most crucial moving forward is that the woman and her husband maintain unity, even if it means limiting interactions with his family.
While the OP hasn’t spoken to her in-laws since the incident, the Reddit community hoped that her husband would step up to shield her from further mistreatment. As u/WatchingTellyNow wrote, “Your husband needed to grow a shiny spine as soon as they started, and should have told them off instantly.”
Newsweek has reached out to u/Sea-Rip-9749 for comment via Reddit.







