In the quiet moments of their once vibrant love story, a shadow crept in, twisting dreams into despair. They had built their lives on hope and ambition, two young souls ready to conquer the world together. But when her mind broke under the weight of relentless depression, the foundation that held them began to crumble, dragging him into an abyss he never imagined.
He stands at a crossroads, torn between his commitment to the woman he loves and the crushing burden her illness has become. Her spiraling spending, a desperate grasp for relief, is not just draining their finances but eroding the very essence of their partnership. The question haunts him: when does love become a cage, and when is it time to let go?

AITHA for divorcing my depressed wife because her depression and depression induced spending are dragging me down?





















As renowned family therapist and researcher Dr. John Gottman explains, “Unresolved conflict is destructive to relationships, but contempt is corrosive.” In this situation, the husband is exhibiting understandable frustration and betrayal, while the wife is responding with deflection and accusations of abuse, which strongly suggests a breakdown in respectful communication and the presence of contempt or defensiveness in their conflict resolution patterns.
The situation involves a severe imbalance of emotional labor and transparency. The husband initially set aside his career expectations to support his wife’s mandated recovery, but this support quickly morphed into an unsustainable lifestyle involving significant financial burden and domestic responsibility, which was not reciprocated. When the wife actively concealed her reproductive choice (birth control) while verbally agreeing to conception, she introduced a fundamental breach of trust that supersedes the initial agreement related to her health recovery. Her subsequent labeling of the husband as an “abuser” for confronting her regarding this discovery is a classic defensive maneuver to avoid accountability.
While compassion for the wife’s underlying depression is necessary, her actions—excessive spending, refusal to engage in recovery planning, and active deception about family planning—demonstrate a failure to meet her partnership responsibilities. The husband’s actions in seeking divorce, given the discovery and the three-year drain on resources and emotional energy, are understandable from a boundary-setting perspective. A constructive path forward, had communication been possible, would have involved couples counseling focused on establishing clear, time-bound mutual goals for recovery, financial accountability, and transparent discussions about future reproductive desires, rather than allowing the crisis to dictate the terms of the marriage.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

















The husband finds himself at a severe emotional and financial breaking point, feeling betrayed after supporting his wife through a mental health crisis only to discover she has been secretly using birth control while agreeing to start a family. His attempt to support her healing has morphed into years of unpaid domestic labor and significant debt management, leading to a crisis of trust and a desire for divorce.
The core conflict rests on whether the husband is justified in prioritizing his own well-being and future plans against his commitment to his wife, especially when deception regarding major life goals (children) is involved. Is it selfish to seek divorce from a partner experiencing severe mental illness, or is abandoning a partnership built on deception a necessary act of self-preservation?







