The user, a 32-year-old woman (OP), has been married to her 36-year-old husband for four years. The central conflict began when the OP noticed a strange, off-taste in her personal food items, like overnight oats and coffee, despite not becoming physically ill.
After consulting a friend, the OP installed a hidden camera, which shockingly revealed that her husband was urinating into her food and beverages. Following this discovery, the OP reacted explosively, causing significant damage to his property. The husband is now pleading for reconciliation, claiming it was an attempt to fulfill a long-standing, non-consensual fetish, leaving the OP questioning whether to stay or leave.

AITAH for wanting to divorce my husband bc he added pee to my food?










According to Dr. Hayden Ward, a specialist in interpersonal boundaries, “Trust is the foundational currency of any intimate relationship; when that trust is violated through deception and physical compromise, the resulting trauma often outweighs the perceived value of the relationship itself.”
The husband’s actions moved far beyond a simple fetish discussion, entering the realm of non-consensual physical violation and deception. His prior acknowledgment of the fetish, followed by secretive enactment, suggests a severe boundary collapse and a profound lack of respect for the OP’s bodily autonomy. While the husband frames his actions as a ‘mistake’ related to a fetish he believed he was fulfilling ‘without her knowing,’ this framing ignores the reality that non-consensual acts, regardless of intent, constitute abuse. The OP’s extreme reaction, while destructive to property, is an understandable, albeit unhelpful, emotional response to discovering such a vile betrayal.
The pathway forward is extremely narrow. While therapy is necessary for the husband to address his severe boundary issues and the underlying need to act out fantasies non-consensually, the OP must prioritize her own emotional and psychological safety first. Forgiveness in this context requires the offending party to show genuine, sustained remorse and acceptance of the severity of the violation, not just focus on the damage done to their belongings. If the OP cannot see a path to safety and respect, separation is a valid and professional recommendation.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.










The OP is in a state of extreme distress and betrayal following the discovery of her husband’s secretive and invasive actions. The conflict pits the husband’s insistence on working through his bizarre, non-consensual fetish against the OP’s justified feelings of violation and the destruction of trust in their marriage.
The core issue is whether this profound breach of trust, enacted through a fetishistic act hidden from the OP, constitutes an unforgivable violation warranting divorce, or if the husband’s promises of therapy and change are enough grounds for the OP to attempt to salvage the marriage. Should the OP prioritize her immediate safety and feelings of violation, or work through the marriage vows?







