After six years together and two years of marriage, the arrival of their baby brought both joy and unexpected pain. The husband’s heart shattered when the woman he loved, struggling with postpartum depression, uttered words that pierced his soul—words that made him feel invisible and unwanted. Her tearful apology and the hope of healing through medication softened the storm, but the emotional wound ran deeper than anyone could see.
Now, caught in the silent aftermath, he moves through each day in quiet resignation, his love shadowed by the echo of those devastating words. Though forgiveness lingers between them, the fragile bond they once shared has been tested in ways they never imagined, leaving him adrift in a sea of longing and uncertainty, waiting for the day their hearts might truly reconnect.

AITAH for going through the motions after my post partum wife told me she doesn’t find me attractive anymore?







As stated by Dr. Lori Gottlieb, a psychotherapist who often discusses relationships, “We often look for the story that makes us right, rather than the story that helps us connect.” In this situation, both partners are holding onto narratives: the wife needs the narrative of forgiveness and recovery from Postpartum Depression (PPD), while the husband is holding onto the narrative of the rejection, which makes him ‘right’ to feel distant.
The wife’s comment, though devastating, occurred during a time of significant biological and psychological stress (postpartum period and untreated PPD). While the impact on the husband is real and valid—he is experiencing emotional injury and a resulting loss of desire—his decision to put the relationship on indefinite hold until the child is 18 months old creates distance and prevents the necessary repair work. His current ‘autopilot’ mode is a form of self-protection but also starves the marriage of the connection needed for recovery.
The husband’s reaction is understandable as a defense mechanism against feeling unlovable. However, continuing to punish the relationship through emotional withdrawal, even if unintentional, prevents the wife from fully healing her guilt and confirming the success of her treatment. A constructive recommendation would be for the couple to seek specialized couples counseling now, focusing not on immediate intimacy, but on validating the husband’s pain while establishing firm boundaries around communication and mutual emotional labor moving forward.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.















She was sick and although she’s improved, you continue to hold her illness against her. Did you promise to live her in sickness and in health? Maybe you need to get yourself some therapy.

The husband is currently experiencing deep emotional withdrawal following a painful statement made by his wife during a period of postpartum difficulty. While the wife has sought treatment and shown remorse, the husband is struggling to move past the insult, leading him to operate on autopilot within the marriage and postpone any decision about intimacy or the relationship’s future.
The central conflict lies between the wife’s need for forgiveness and the husband’s need for emotional safety and time to heal from the hurtful words spoken under duress. Can a relationship recover trust and intimacy when one partner internalizes a temporary, stress-induced rejection, or is prolonged emotional distance harmful even when justified by the initial trauma?







