Haunted by a past marred with pain and loss, he carries the weight of a fractured family and a brother lost to addiction. The insurance money meant to provide some relief instead becomes a source of silent conflict, as his desire to donate clashes with the harsh reality of mounting debts and financial strain. Beneath the surface of their love lies a quiet struggle — one partner striving to uplift, the other trapped by the shadows of his upbringing.
Amidst the imbalance of effort and sacrifice, the woman’s heart aches with unspoken disappointment. She shoulders the burden of their shared life, working tirelessly while hoping for growth and change that never quite comes. Their love, tested by hardship and unmet expectations, hangs in delicate balance, yearning for understanding and a way forward.

My Boyfriend Got $130.000 Inheritance Gave It Away And Now Wants Me To Pay 2.900$ Rent





















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a severe breakdown in the couple’s mutually established boundaries, particularly around shared financial responsibility and individual needs.
The boyfriend’s decision to donate the entire sum, against the wishes of both his partner and his own mother, indicates a powerful, possibly unconscious, drive related to his unresolved trauma surrounding his brother’s death and abusive relationship. Donating the money may be a way to reframe a painful inheritance (money linked to a tragic death) into a purely ‘good’ act, avoiding the practical, relationship-heavy responsibility of using it for shared future security. The OP, conversely, is operating under the principle of proportional contribution, a standard practice where higher earners support more, but this expectation changes when a significant, unexpected asset enters the picture. The boyfriend misinterprets the OP’s request for financial security as greed, while the OP feels their emotional and physical labor (working long hours) is being dismissed because the boyfriend achieved a short-term moral victory.
The OP’s reaction—cutting back on shared resources like food—is an understandable, albeit reactive, attempt to establish the new financial reality they demanded. However, it escalates conflict rather than fostering communication. Professionally, the OP’s insistence on an immediate 50/50 split is an appropriate assertion of their financial limits, but the *method* (withholding necessities) is damaging. The constructive recommendation is for the OP to clearly state that while the donation was his choice, the financial partnership must immediately revert to a mutually agreed-upon cost-sharing model based on current income, or the living arrangement itself must be re-evaluated.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.













Easy fix. Find out what he can afford, and then move to a shithole that costs 2x that.



(1) This isn’t necessarily a problem:
>We’ve been together for 3 years and for 2 of that I’ve paid the majority of the expenses. I make ~90k a year and he makes 35k.


>I will admit I feel like he can do better but with his bad upbringing and crappy family I tried to be gentle about nagging him and he hasn’t made any areas of improvement.









I
He gaslights you by making YOU – the person who has floated him for years – the villain in this story [you aren’t]. >I’ve already talked about everything I’ve wrote above to him and he just ignores me.





The original poster (OP) is experiencing significant financial strain and resentment because their boyfriend chose to donate his entire $130,000 insurance payout to charity, despite the OP currently covering the majority of their shared living expenses. The central conflict is between the boyfriend’s desire to honor his late brother through a grand, selfless act and the OP’s practical need for financial stability, stability the OP has single-handedly provided for years.
Given that the boyfriend has willfully ignored joint financial needs to pursue a personal moral goal, leaving the OP to shoulder the burden, should the OP immediately enforce a strict 50/50 financial split, even if it causes immediate hardship for the boyfriend, or is the OP’s feeling of being used justified given the financial reality they face?







