She Brought A Bubble Cigarette To Join The Smokers, And Now Her Family Says She Owes An Apology

Family gatherings are supposed to feel warm and inclusive, even when personalities don’t quite match. But sometimes, the smallest habits can quietly create a divide.

For one woman attending her daughter-in-law’s family events, that divide showed up during something as ordinary as a smoke break. While everyone else stepped outside together, she found herself left behind, alone for long stretches.

What started as an attempt to feel included turned into an unexpected conflict that now has her wondering if she crossed a line.

She Brought a Bubble Cigarette to Join the Smokers, and Now Her Family Says She Owes an Apology

Here’s how a bubble cigarette became the center of a surprisingly tense family disagreement.

'AITA for joining my dil outside when they smoke but with one of those bubble cigeratees. My DIL claims I am mocking them?'

Throwaway account. This feels really stupid, and I am being told I need to apologize.

My DIL and her family smoke; at any event they are invited to, they will at one point go outside and smoke. Some vape, and some smoke cigarettes.

What happens is they disappear for like 30 mins and everyone that doesn't smoke stays inside and keeps doing there thing.

The problem is that I used to just hang out with my daughters when they did this but they have recently moved away.

So now during any of the smoke breaks for her family events, I am basically left alone for 30 mins.

I tried to join them, but they kept offerieng me cigerattes and bascially said that I need to be smoking to join.

I asked if they could space them so I am not alone by myself for 30 mins and they told me it was a socail thing and I can join...

This is literally only a problem at her family events and I go alone ( I am divorced).

So I bought a cigarette that blows bubbles, so I could join them, but not actually smoke, and not have them offer me a real cigarette.

I thought it was fun. I went to their event last weekend and joined them on their smoking break with my bubble cigarette.

I got a few annoyed looks, and the smoke break wrapped up quicker than usual.

After that my DIL pulled me aside and was pissed. She told me it was not okay for me to be mocking them, and she needs an apology.

I told her no, and I just wanted to join them and not be left alone for 30 mins..

My son told me I also need to apologize and never take the bubble cigarette to their event again.. I don't feel like I did anything wrong

At first, it was just an awkward rhythm she noticed. Every time she attended her daughter-in-law’s family gatherings, there would come a point when half the group would disappear outside.

Some smoked cigarettes, others vaped, but they all went together. The remaining guests stayed inside, continuing conversations, but for her, it felt different.

She was there alone.

She used to pass the time chatting with her own daughters during those moments, but since they had moved away, that option disappeared. Suddenly, those 30-minute smoke breaks felt much longer. Quiet. Isolating.

So she tried the obvious solution. She asked if she could join them outside.

That’s where things took a strange turn.

Instead of welcoming her, she says the group made it clear she wasn’t really part of that circle unless she was smoking too.

They offered her cigarettes, casually at first, then more insistently. When she declined, they suggested the space was “for smokers” and implied she should either participate or stay inside.

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It wasn’t said outright, but the message landed.

If she wanted to be included, she needed to play by their rules.

That didn’t sit right with her, but neither did being left alone every time. So she came up with what she thought was a lighthearted workaround.

She bought a novelty item, a fake cigarette that blows bubbles. Harmless, a little silly, and most importantly, it gave her something to hold so she wouldn’t be pressured into smoking.

The next time she attended one of their events, she joined the group outside, bubble cigarette in hand.

From her perspective, it was playful. A way to bridge the gap without compromising her own boundaries.

From their perspective, it didn’t land that way.

She noticed the looks first. Subtle at the beginning, then more obvious. The conversation felt shorter, the energy shifted, and the smoke break ended earlier than usual.

Later, her daughter-in-law pulled her aside.

She was upset. Not mildly annoyed, but genuinely offended. She accused her of mocking them, of making fun of their habit, and said it was inappropriate.

She asked for an apology and told her not to bring the bubble cigarette again.

Her son backed that up.

That’s where the confusion really set in.

Because in her mind, she wasn’t mocking anyone. She wasn’t making comments, rolling her eyes, or judging their choices. She just didn’t want to be excluded. And she didn’t want to start smoking just to belong.

There’s something deeper going on here than a novelty item.

On one side, you have a group that treats smoking as a shared social ritual, something that defines who belongs in that space.

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On the other, you have someone trying to participate without compromising her own health or values.

Instead of meeting in the middle, both sides reacted defensively.

Her solution, while creative, may have unintentionally highlighted the behavior of the group.

Sometimes humor can feel like criticism, especially when it mirrors something people are sensitive about. Even if that wasn’t her intention, it might explain why they felt uncomfortable.

At the same time, their response raises questions too. Telling someone they can’t join a conversation unless they adopt a harmful habit isn’t exactly welcoming behavior. Social rituals shouldn’t come with conditions that exclude people.

And that’s where the real issue sits.

Not the bubble cigarette, but the lack of inclusion.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Most people were firmly on her side, pointing out how unusual it is to require someone to smoke just to socialize.

kennyleigh1999 − I’ve been around smokers my whole life and none have ever told me I couldn’t hang unless I had a cigarette lol. That’s wild.

faulty_rainbow − Oh my god if you pulled this at my house you'd forever be my best friend lol. NTA, they just chose something they all have in common to...

Little_Loki918 − NTA but to be brutally honest, they just don't like you.

I have never been amongst a group of smokers who insisted that you HAVE to smoke to hang out with them.

Save yourself the drama and stop attending OR if you really want to be among people who don't want you there just leave when they go out for their cig...

Many saw her bubble cigarette as harmless, even funny, and felt the group’s reaction was overly sensitive.

Nyfinity − You tried to find a playful way to "join" in, and they came unglued.

You are absolutely NTA. They are 100% TA for literally pressuring you to smoke or be excluded. This is a family gathering, not high school. Wtf.

GenoFlower − Did you tell any of them that it was rude to tell you that you can't hang out there while they smoke if you don't smoke, and leave...

Why are you even going to these events? Where is your son? Why isn't he making sure you aren't left alone?

(I assume you mean literally alone.) NTA, the bubble cig thing is cute, and their family sucks. Your son does, too.

Septiqflesh − They don't like you. Never in my life have I seen anyone give a s__t if you are smoking or not during smoke breaks.

JustVisitingLifeform − NTA. They are. What kind of hosts abandon their guests for thirty minutes and then pressure them to take up an unhealthy habit?

Maybe just stop going to their events. Go out and meet new people who don't try to pressure you into smoking.

JimGerm − You're clearly NTA in this situation, but it's pretty clear to me they don't want you around and are being super passive aggressive about it. DIL, I hope...

At the same time, a few pointed out a harder truth. Sometimes exclusion isn’t about rules, it’s about people.

Marmy84 − As a smoker myself absolutely NTA, I would have laughed and had a good time with you, they lack manners if they crop non smokers out or even...

CorrectAdhesiveness9 − NTA, but do they even like you? I’m not saying this to be mean,

but it sounds like perhaps they don’t, and I would definitely be getting some bad vibes off of them if I were in the same position. Maybe start with that?

Her attempt came from a good place, even if it didn’t land the way she hoped. Their reaction, on the other hand, suggests there may be more tension beneath the surface than anyone is saying out loud.

An apology might smooth things over, but it won’t fix the bigger issue if the dynamic stays the same.

Because at the end of the day, no one should have to pretend to be someone they’re not just to avoid sitting alone.

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So what do you think? Was this harmless fun that got misunderstood, or did it cross into something unintentionally disrespectful?

 

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