Instead of confronting him face-to-face, she messaged him:
“Take the post down out of respect for me.”
She followed it with a bigger announcement:
“Tell your family I love them, but I won’t be coming for Thanksgiving or hosting Christmas. I need space.”
When her husband later approached her gently, she explained that she refused to sit in a room with people whose votes supported policies she believed harmed women and vulnerable communities. She wrote that she couldn’t “unwrap gifts” from people who backed a party pushing ideas she saw as dangerous. To her surprise, her husband didn’t fight back or pressure her to attend the holidays. Despite his closeness to his family, he seemed to understand how deeply the election affected her.
She acknowledged he was a good man, which only made the situation more emotionally complicated. Andrea realized she couldn’t change the election — only her own boundaries. Her story reflects a larger truth: political divisions aren’t just national; they cut through homes, marriages, and holiday traditions. It raises a powerful question many families now face: when do personal values outweigh tradition?