Alone in a foreign place, she battles exhaustion and overwhelming responsibility, caring for a newborn and her young niece without a single helping hand. Her husband’s deployment leaves her not just physically isolated but emotionally drained, with no time or space to breathe amidst the relentless demands of motherhood and guardianship.
Then, when she finally tries to hold onto what little energy she has, her husband asks her to take on yet another burden—driving a struggling pregnant woman to appointments, expecting her to stretch beyond her limits without a thought for her own breaking point. In that moment, her quiet refusal becomes a powerful plea for recognition, for the mercy she so desperately needs.

AITA for refusing to cater to a pregnant/ill woman who has nobody to help her?













As renowned psychologist Dr. Henry Cloud explains, “Boundaries are not about keeping other people out, but about protecting what is inside.” This situation starkly illustrates a failure to maintain essential personal boundaries under duress. The original poster (OP) is operating in a survival mode, managing a high-demand caregiving situation (newborn, toddler, niece) without a support system. Her refusal to drive the other spouse is a necessary act of self-preservation, recognizing that adding another obligation would lead to complete burnout, as she clearly stated she feels she is nearing a breaking point.
The husband’s motivation appears rooted in a desire to be helpful and maintain a positive image within his deployed group, but his actions demonstrate a significant lack of empathy and awareness regarding the OP’s reality. By volunteering her time without consent, he treats her resources (time, energy, emotional capacity) as communal property rather than recognizing them as finite and already overextended. His dismissal of her feelings as ‘overdramatic’ is a form of emotional invalidation, shifting the blame onto the person who is struggling.
The OP’s refusal was entirely appropriate given the verifiable physical and emotional demands she is under. For future similar situations, the constructive recommendation is for the OP to establish proactive, non-negotiable communication regarding her capacity when the husband next attempts to volunteer her time. This involves clearly stating boundaries *before* he agrees to anything, emphasizing that her current caregiving role is her full-time commitment and requires maximum energy conservation.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.













































The original poster is facing extreme exhaustion while caring for a newborn and a young niece alone due to her husband’s deployment. Her central conflict arises when her husband volunteers her services to a fellow service member’s spouse for early morning errands, directly contradicting her stated needs for rest and support.
Is the original poster justified in refusing to take on additional caregiving responsibilities when she is already completely depleted, or does the husband’s expectation that she prioritize helping another person in need override her immediate, critical need for self-preservation?







