He arrived in the US chasing dreams of education and opportunity, only to find love that promised a shared future. But beneath the surface of plans and hopes, a quiet ache grew—an unexpected longing for the homeland he left behind. As his girlfriend painted vivid pictures of family life rooted in American soil, his heart tugged in the opposite direction, caught between love and a deep, unshakable yearning for home.
Their future, once a shared vision, now feels like a crossroads fraught with silent tension. The warmth of her excitement contrasts with his creeping doubt, as the dream of building a life together clashes with the pull of his roots. In this tender struggle, the question looms: can two worlds truly merge when one soul aches to return?

AITAH for telling my girlfriend I don’t want to stay in the US when she was talking about our future?
















According to Dr. John Gottman, a leading relationship researcher, effective communication involves ‘turning toward’ a partner’s bids for connection and sharing vulnerability. In this situation, the Dutch man acted on vulnerability by disclosing a major conflict in his vision for the future. However, the timing and framing of this disclosure—blurted out when his girlfriend was actively discussing future timelines—created a sense of betrayal rather than collaboration. She perceived this as hiding a fundamental misalignment, which immediately erodes the ‘trust’ and ‘safety’ necessary for long-term planning.
The core issue here revolves around differing life scripts and mismatched expectations regarding geographic location, a common stressor in long-distance or cross-cultural relationships. The girlfriend is operating under the assumption of shared location (the US, near her family), evidenced by her turning down opportunities elsewhere. The man, experiencing homesickness and cultural pull, has allowed this underlying tension to grow until it erupted. His motivation was honest disclosure, but the effect was perceived as an ultimatum or a sudden withdrawal of commitment, leading her to question his core dedication: ‘if I really wanted a life with her I’d make it work here.’ This highlights a classic dynamic where one partner feels they are sacrificing more for the shared location.
The man’s action was appropriate in the sense that one should never enter marriage or parenthood with such a significant, unvoiced reservation. However, the execution was poor. A constructive recommendation would be for both partners to pause all timeline discussions and seek couples counseling immediately. The man needs to clearly articulate that his desire to move is rooted in cultural identity and family values, not a desire to leave *her*. The couple must then explore viable compromises, such as establishing a concrete timeline for a trial period in the US, or investigating how the Netherlands could accommodate her career/family connections, rather than viewing this as an immediate ‘here or there’ binary.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.














The individual is facing a significant emotional conflict between his deep personal desire to return to his home country, the Netherlands, for raising a family and his commitment to his long-term American girlfriend, who is deeply invested in building a future near her family in the US. His recent statement, intended as honest disclosure before major commitments, has severely damaged the trust and shared future vision she had built.
Is prioritizing the cultural upbringing desired for future children in one’s home country a non-negotiable need that warrants potentially dissolving a serious three-year relationship, or is the commitment to a long-term partner in the current location a greater obligation that requires suppressing personal cultural longing?







