She carried the weight of shattered dreams and a love unraveling beneath the strain of infertility and unspoken grief. Diagnosed with PCOS and facing the harsh truth of her inability to conceive naturally, she fought to hold her marriage together, but Jon’s silent withdrawal broke the fragile bond they once shared. The home they built became a prison of cold shoulders and quiet despair, until the final blow came with his unwillingness to fight for what they had.
Amid the loneliness of lockdown and the pain of impending separation, she braced herself for a new beginning far from the life they once dreamed of. The end of their six-year marriage marked not just the closing of a chapter, but the painful loss of a future she had hoped to nurture. Yet, even in heartbreak, there lingers a flicker of resilience waiting to ignite.

AITA for choosing to live in a city which will make it nearly impossible for my ex to see his child?
















As noted by family law expert and psychologist Dr. Terri Givens, ‘In post-divorce co-parenting situations, establishing clear, geographically stable primary care environments early on often benefits the child’s long-term adjustment, provided the arrangement is equitable and sustainable for the caregivers.’ The core conflict here revolves around differing levels of perceived sacrifice and differing interpretations of what constitutes ‘fairness’ in the context of an unplanned pregnancy following divorce.
The ex-husband’s reaction—assuming immediate relocation and then reacting with hostility when that assumption is challenged—suggests an entitlement to access and perhaps a failure to fully process the finality of the divorce. His insistence that the mother move seems rooted in preserving his current life structure while demanding she reconstruct hers. The mother, conversely, has already navigated significant emotional and logistical upheaval (diagnosis, infertility treatments, divorce, cross-country move) and is now relying on her pre-existing, robust support system to manage the high demands of single parenthood with a newborn. Her desire to remain where she has family support to maintain employment aligns with sound financial and emotional planning for the child.
The mother’s actions in choosing her established location were appropriate given her need for support and professional continuity, especially since the father initiated the separation and indicated he was unwilling to pursue fostering/adoption earlier. A constructive recommendation would be for the mother to immediately seek legal counsel regarding custody and location mandates to formalize the arrangement, while communicating future visitation schedules in a structured, non-emotional manner to mitigate further attacks from the ex-husband and his family.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

![[deleted] NTA NTA NTA!!! Oh my word, the unmitigated guile...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/9c21dce43ab73cbd3e7f7c28a60d3361.png)



















The individual is facing immense pressure from her ex-husband and his family regarding the future location of their unexpectedly conceived child. She feels justified in prioritizing her established support system and career in her hometown after already enduring the disruption of divorce and relocation.
Given that the ex-husband refuses to relocate despite initiating the separation, should the mother be expected to sacrifice her established life and support network to accommodate his desire for proximity to the newborn, or does her right to stability outweigh his preference for physical closeness?







