For nearly two decades, he has stood by his wife’s side, witnessing a profound transformation that reshaped their lives. Through the highs and lows of love and loyalty, he has carried the weight of their family’s daily struggles, watching her battle not just the numbers on a scale, but the echoes of a past filled with judgment and pain.
Behind closed doors, the silent sacrifices tell a story of devotion and resilience. Her body bears the marks of motherhood and hardship, while his heart carries the burden of unspoken support, striving to honor her wishes and love her fiercely despite the relentless challenges they face together.

WIBTA if I silently gave up on my wife’s projects?



















Dr. Harriet Lerner, a clinical psychologist known for her work on family systems and boundaries, often emphasizes the importance of clear communication and the danger of unspoken resentments in long-term relationships. In this scenario, the dynamic has shifted into one of extreme dependency where the husband functions as the primary caregiver, logistical manager, and emotional buffer for the entire family, including his wife’s emotional needs.
The core issue here is not the wife’s weight itself, but the extreme imbalance of emotional and physical labor and the pattern of delegation. The wife’s past trauma regarding weight loss likely informs her strict boundary against unsolicited advice, which the husband has respected. However, this boundary has unintentionally created a system where she can propose large tasks (“things she would like ‘us’ to try”) that require significant executive functioning, logistical planning, and physical execution—all tasks the husband is already depleted from performing for the rest of the family. When she sends children to him for emotional regulation because she ‘gets escalated,’ she is also outsourcing emotional labor, adding to his fatigue.
The husband’s proposed action—shifting the responsibility entirely back to her with the phrase, ‘Let me know when you want to make that happen’—is a necessary step toward establishing a sustainable boundary to prevent burnout. His exhaustion is palpable and legitimate. A constructive recommendation would be for the husband to initiate a calm conversation, not about *stopping* tasks, but about *rebalancing the partnership*. This conversation should focus on his current capacity (e.g., “I love you, but I am currently operating at 100% capacity managing A, B, and C. For us to start D, we need to identify what task I can stop doing or what external help we can hire/arrange so I have the bandwidth.”) This moves the discussion from blame to shared problem-solving within the existing physical limitations.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.



































The husband finds himself in a deeply taxing situation, having taken on nearly all physical and emotional labor for the family for a decade due to his wife’s severe mobility issues related to her weight. His struggle stems from the conflict between his commitment to his marriage and his complete exhaustion from supporting his wife’s wishes for projects he must execute alone.
Is the husband justified in withdrawing his support for his wife’s new projects, effectively telling her she must organize them herself, or is this withdrawal of help a breach of marital partnership given the underlying reasons for her physical limitations? Where should the balance lie between supporting a spouse’s goals and preserving one’s own capacity to function?







