She entered the relationship with trust and hope, only to find herself caught in a relentless battle over her own boundaries. Every encounter became a test of her resolve, as he persistently pressured her to abandon the protection she valued, disregarding her comfort and safety.
Despite her clear refusals, his manipulative insistence cast a shadow of doubt and discomfort over their intimacy. Her fight was not just about condoms—it was a fight for respect, autonomy, and the right to say no without guilt or coercion.

AITAH for not wanting to go on birth control?










According to Dr. Emily Nagoski, a sex educator and author specializing in the science of female sexuality, sexual pleasure and safety are not mutually exclusive. Effective communication and mutual respect regarding sexual boundaries are foundational to healthy intimacy.
The situation described highlights a significant issue in relationship dynamics: a failure of consent regarding sexual health practices. The man’s persistent attempts to negotiate or circumvent the use of condoms after the woman has clearly stated her boundary constitutes coercion, not negotiation. His arguments—that sex is ‘better’ without condoms, that he ‘never got anyone pregnant,’ and his assurances about STD status—are classic avoidance tactics used to dismiss a partner’s legitimate safety concerns in favor of immediate gratification. Furthermore, demanding the woman adopt long-term, invasive forms of birth control (Pill or IUD) when she is uncomfortable with the side effects shifts the entire burden of risk onto her, which is inequitable.
The internal conflict experienced by the woman, fueled by external comments suggesting contraception is solely a female responsibility, reflects ingrained societal biases. In healthy relationships, both partners share responsibility for safer sex. The woman’s adherence to condoms, given the short duration of the relationship (two months) and infrequent meetings, is the most appropriate and prudent course of action. A constructive recommendation would be for the woman to firmly reiterate that the condom boundary is non-negotiable for safety and comfort. If the partner continues to pressure her or refuses to use condoms, this indicates a severe lack of respect that warrants ending the relationship, as mutual respect for physical autonomy is a prerequisite for seriousness.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.



Condoms can tear/break. There could be a spill during removal




The woman in this situation faces a direct conflict between maintaining her established boundaries regarding sexual health and the persistent pressure from her partner to change her contraception methods for his comfort.
Given that the partner refuses to respect the boundary set by using condoms and insists on unprotected sex despite the risks, is the woman justified in viewing this as a fundamental incompatibility, or does the social expectation that contraception is primarily a female responsibility require her to reconsider her stance?







