For seven years, a fragile family existed on the edge of a promise never fulfilled—a man and his ex-fiancée, Karla, bound by love, a toddler, and unspoken truths. Their shared life was a mosaic of hope and doubt, where his honesty about fearing marriage clashed with her desperate yearning for a future that seemed just out of reach.
In the quiet spaces between their smiles, a silent battle raged—his skepticism shaped by a broken past, her heart anchored in the dream of forever. She stayed, clinging to a hope that time would soften his resolve, while he wrestled with a love that wasn’t enough to bridge the gap between what they wanted and what they feared.

AITAH for walking away from my engagement after my fiancee expressed that she just “deserved” it for security?
























Dr. John M. Gottman, a leading researcher in marital stability, emphasizes the importance of ‘turning toward’ a partner’s bids for connection and maintaining positive sentiment override. In this situation, the fiancé (OP) repeatedly failed to meet the core need of his partner regarding marriage, creating a significant, unresolved bid. While OP was honest about his initial hesitation, staying in a relationship where the partner explicitly stated a dealbreaker was an ongoing performance that eventually led to resentment and manipulation from both sides.
Karla’s actions, particularly staying despite the stated dealbreaker and later admitting to wanting marriage primarily for financial security, point toward unmet needs being addressed through transactional means rather than genuine partnership. Her distress at the sister’s wedding and her alleged statement reveal a reliance on external validation and perceived security over emotional commitment to the OP. For the OP, the proposal appears to have been a logical concession to maintain stability (the family unit) rather than an authentic expression of love or desire for lifelong commitment, which is a recipe for emotional disaster when one partner feels trapped.
The OP acted appropriately by ending the relationship upon discovering the extent of the deception, as trust was irrevocably broken. Moving forward, the OP should prioritize clear, non-negotiable communication regarding core values in future relationships, focusing on partners whose life goals align immediately, rather than hoping core differences will resolve themselves through time or pressure. Focusing energy now on establishing clear co-parenting structures, rather than dwelling on the betrayed feelings over the ring or financial aspects, is the most constructive next step.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

















My honest impression of you is that you spend an inordinate amount of time looking down your nose at people you consider lesser than yourself. Hell, your one reply I read below backs that up nicely.


It adds no value *to you*, oh high and might most important person.







The individual is grappling with the fallout of a long-term relationship that ended due to a fundamental misalignment in expectations regarding marriage and commitment. Despite achieving a logical separation of assets, the emotional impact of realizing the partnership was based on the partner’s desire for security rather than mutual, deep affection has left him feeling hollow and betrayed.
Given that the foundation of the relationship was built upon one partner knowingly compromising on a core value (the fiancé’s desire for marriage) based on a hope the other would change, the central conflict is between personal autonomy and relational honesty. Can a partnership survive when one party stays solely for an expected outcome that the other fundamentally resists, or does this dynamic always guarantee eventual collapse?







