Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!
A girlfriend has shared her overwhelming disappointment after finding an 'ugly' engagement ring in her boyfriend's bedside table.
Instead of being thrilled with the surprise find, she was instead disgusted by the three stone diamond ring when she opened up the box.
'Ewwww. Self-shame Friday here I come,' she wrote in a Facebook group alongside a photo of the ring.
'Found this on the boyfriend's nightstand, not a fan. Please roast [the ring] and then tell me how to tactfully say, "No, you need to go get something different."'
A girlfriend has shared her overwhelming disappointment after finding an 'ugly' engagement ring in her boyfriend's bedside table
Opinions were divided, with some urging the woman to tell her boyfriend and others accusing her of being 'entitled'. It's unclear if she had given her beau any guidance as to the style she liked beforehand.
'It's okay to accept a proposal but let him know the ring isn't your style,' a woman wrote.
'This is a thing, women will say what they want and men will choose something different,' another added. 'She's so real for this.'
'Meh, I'm neutral without more info. You should be allowed to like your own ring. Most of us wear it for the rest of our lives,' a third wrote.
Others took a more brutal approach, with many accusing the girlfriend of having a bad attitude and even claiming she was bold for assuming the ring was for her at all.
'Spicy opinion of the day: Buy your own goddamn ring or don't say anything. Expensive engagement rings as a concept are weird and cringe,' one person said.
'I hope it's for his other girlfriend,' another wrote.
It's not the first time marriage-related woes have been in the spotlight of late. Last month a bride was criticised for subtly asking loved ones for money to buy a house even though she and her fiancé plan to secretly elope (pictured: the invite)
'Ewww, not a fan of entitled [people],' a third added. 'Me looking at my three stone engagement ring on my finger that I'm absolutely in love with.'
It's not the first time marriage-related woes have been in the spotlight of late. Last month a bride was criticised for 'subtly' asking loved ones for money to buy a house even though she and her fiancé plan to secretly elope.
The woman sought advice from a popular Facebook group about how to ask for gifts or money even though she won't be having a traditional wedding.
After 'eloping in secret', the couple planned to send out 'announcement cards' to friends and family.
The card reads: 'In light of our new chapter, we want to announce our excitement of buying a house!'
Hundreds quickly dubbed the act as 'tacky' and encouraged the bride to deter from including such a selfish line on the card.