She carried the weight of a marriage fractured by neglect and betrayal, clinging to hope that time would mend what was broken. Years of loneliness and unreciprocated effort left her exhausted, her pleas for partnership met with indifference and resentment, deepening the chasm between them.
Betrayed by infidelity and burdened with the sole responsibility of healing their wounds, she fought to hold their family together alone. Her unwavering commitment stood in stark contrast to his refusal to change, forcing her to confront the painful truth that love and effort must be mutual to survive.

UPDATE* to AITAH for wanting a divorce my husband doesn’t want and risking his relationship with our child












As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a profound breakdown in relational boundaries, especially concerning emotional labor and accountability. The OP invested years attempting to fix the marriage unilaterally—by managing the household, addressing infidelity alone, seeking self-help resources, and even consoling the husband about his own infidelity—all while the husband consistently refused reciprocal effort or professional intervention.
The husband’s behavior, particularly his comments about his ‘helping’ being sufficient and his refusal of couples counseling, indicates a deep unwillingness to meet the baseline requirements of a partnership. When the OP finally asserted a necessary boundary (seeking divorce), his response shifted to using the child as an ultimate leverage point, a common tactic when a partner feels a loss of control. The OP’s decision to separate, despite the current emotionally charged cohabitation, aligns with self-preservation when facing entrenched patterns of non-cooperation and emotional unavailability.
The OP’s actions were appropriate given the documented unwillingness of the husband to engage in meaningful change over time. For future situations where one partner is carrying the emotional or logistical load, a constructive recommendation is to establish firm, non-negotiable action deadlines (e.g., ‘If you do not attend three counseling sessions by X date, I will proceed with separation plans’). This shifts the focus from hoping for change to clearly observing whether the partner chooses to meet established relational standards.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.
















The original poster has reached a point of resolution by deciding to separate from her husband and move back to her home country with their child, recognizing that years of hoping for change, coupled with his refusal to engage in necessary counseling or share household responsibilities, made the marriage unsustainable. The central conflict was the OP’s need for partnership and shared responsibility against the husband’s pattern of inaction, emotional evasion, and using their child as leverage during the separation process.
Given the history of unequal effort, refusal to attend joint counseling, and the husband’s recent attempts at emotional manipulation regarding the child during separation, is the OP justified in prioritizing her emotional and physical well-being by leaving, despite the husband framing her decision as ‘breaking up the family’?







