In the quiet shadows of a once loving marriage, a man wrestles with a chasm that depression has carved between him and his wife. Their bond, once filled with warmth and closeness, has been reduced to distant echoes, leaving him isolated in a love that now feels like a ghost of its former self.
Caught in a painful limbo, he faces not only the silent retreat of his wife into her illness but also the harsh judgment of her family, who discovered his secret through the cracks of their fractured trust. This is a story of love strained by mental illness and the unbearable weight of secrets that threaten to unravel everything.

AITA for cheating on my wife?
















According to Dr. Shirley Glass, a noted expert on infidelity and relationships, affairs often serve as a symptom of deeper, unaddressed relational distress rather than the root cause. In this case, the lack of physical and emotional affirmation—the absence of ‘tender’ contact—created a relational void that the husband sought to fill. His partner’s severe depression, while a legitimate health concern, has resulted in an unintended but devastating consequence: the complete cessation of physical partnership, leaving the husband feeling isolated and unloved.
The husband’s actions are understandable from a perspective of unmet basic human needs (touch, affection) but are ethically indefensible within the structure of marriage. His motivation appears to stem from self-preservation against emotional starvation rather than malice. However, by engaging in an affair, he bypassed the established protocols for addressing marital breakdown. The power dynamic here is complex; the wife holds the power through her illness, which dictates the terms of intimacy, leaving the husband feeling powerless and forcing him to seek control and validation externally.
The wife’s family’s reaction reflects a societal norm that prioritizes marital fidelity above all else, ignoring the context of the relationship’s physical void. Moving forward, the husband needed to establish firm boundaries regarding his need for physical connection through direct, non-accusatory communication with his wife, perhaps involving a marriage counselor specializing in chronic illness. The constructive recommendation is to immediately cease the external relationship and present a clear ultimatum to the wife (and potentially her support system): the marriage requires active therapeutic intervention to restore intimacy, or the marriage cannot continue in its current, unfulfilling state.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.




















The individual is facing severe emotional deprivation within their marriage due to their wife’s untreated or poorly managed depression, which has extinguished physical intimacy. This internal crisis led them to seek physical and emotional fulfillment outside the marriage, directly conflicting with the social and familial expectations placed upon committed spouses.
Should the primary obligation to a spouse experiencing severe health issues always supersede the individual’s fundamental need for physical connection and affection, or does a long-term lack of intimacy justify seeking solace elsewhere when all communication avenues have failed?







