Have you ever caught your partner lying?
My Husband Promised to Stop Watching Me Through the Cameras—He Lied

Monitoring the person you love through a lens is a far cry from protecting them, and for one Bright Side reader, it made her feel like a stranger in her own skin. We all want our homes to feel safe, but the most essential bond in a marriage isn’t built on 24/7 surveillance; it’s built on the quiet, unspoken trust that your partner has your back when you aren’t looking. Eve’s story is a raw look at how “checking in” can quickly cross the line into “checking up,” proving that a relationship without privacy is just a job where you can never truly clock out.
Eve sent us a letter.

Hey Bright Side,
I’m currently feeling like a prisoner in my own living room. Two months ago, my husband installed high-tech cameras all over our house.
At first, he said it was for “security,” but it quickly turned into something else. He started texting me all day long: “The baby needs you,” “The kitchen’s a mess,” “Why are you sitting down?”
I finally snapped and told him to stop watching me. He agreed, but I didn’t realize he was just delegating the surveillance.
The very next day, there was a knock on the door. My stomach dropped when I saw the concerned smile of my mother-in-law. She claimed she was “just passing by” to “check how things were going,” but she was scanning the house like she was looking for evidence of my “laziness.”
I was polite, but I was boiling inside. That night, I confronted my husband. I told him it felt like I was being supervised instead of supported. He didn’t even apologize; he just called me dramatic and said I should be “grateful people care.” I feel like I’m losing my mind, and my privacy.
So, Bright Side, am I being “dramatic” for wanting my own husband to stop acting like my shift manager, or has he crossed a major boundary? I’d love some advice on how to get him to see that his “help” is actually hurting our marriage.
Best,
Eve L.
Here is what we think.

He crossed a major boundary when he installed cameras and started spying on you. Leave him in his highly surveilled house or, if you want to stay, rip out the cameras.
Put a cup over each camera when he leaves. Take them off, obviously, if you leave the house, and when he's due home.
Run to a divorce lawyer. Do you really want to spend the rest of your life with a controlling man and his mother?
He's gaslighting you RUN. He's controlling which is a form of abuse. If you have any joint accounts take out your money and put in your personal account. He is out of line and creepy. Get your baby out of this toxic situation.
Are you a cripple? Then TAKE THEM DOWN YOURSELF. CUT THE WIRES. THEN, LEAVE THAT CONTROLLING, (ABUSIVE?), JACKASS. NO ONE has the right to MONITOR anyone else's movements, unless they are IN JAIL. He will escalate, if you don't put a STOP to this, now. You can NEVER trust him, his mother, or anyone else in his family, or friends. I KNOW what I am talking about. When it happened to me, we didn't have cameras but EVERY SINGLE friend that my first husband had, spied on me, "dropped by" when he wasn't there, etc... Please protect yourself.
Dear Eve, what you are experiencing is a serious breach of workplace-style boundaries in a domestic setting. Here is our take on how to handle this with compassion:
- Safety vs. Surveillance: Security cameras are for external threats, not internal monitoring. Using them to critique your housework is an inappropriate use of technology. It’s important to sit him down and explain that a home should be a sanctuary, not a fishbowl.
- The “Mother-in-Law” Proxy: Bringing in a third party to “check in” after being told to stop watching you is a massive red flag. It shows a lack of respect for the boundary you just set. This isn’t “care”; it’s an attempt to maintain control.

- Redefining Support: Real support looks like coming home and helping with the kitchen, not texting about it from an office. You aren’t being "dramatic"—you are reacting to a total lack of workplace empathy within your own marriage.
- The Gratitude Trap: “You should be grateful” is a common phrase used to dismiss valid feelings. You can be grateful for a supportive family while still demanding the right to go about your day without a play-by-play commentary on your every move.
Dear everyone, what would you have done if you were in Eve’s shoes? Would you have just accepted that your husband was “trying to help,” or would you have demanded the cameras be removed immediately? Maybe she needs a divorce? What do you think? Let us know in the comments.
Comments
Have you ever confronted a partner about lying?
My brother in law put cameras in his own place in Japan. He visited his parents and our them in their house. Then he told my partner to put them in our place. When he told me, I told my partner that any camera that appeared in our place would be smashed and posted to Japan. He spies on their mum constantly and I'll be damned if I'll let the weirdo spy on me!
He sounds like a control freak! You should either cover those cameras or take them down! What can he do then, go crying to his mommy??!!😭
It's another form of abuse. Not normal or should be tolerated.
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