A man spent seventeen years enduring emotional abuse from his wife, hoping his love would eventually heal her deep-seated childhood trauma.
After years of suffering, he finally chose to leave the marriage to reclaim his peace, leaving behind a relationship marked by control and instability.

AITAH for refusing to go back to my ex even though she is going to therapy and changed her behaviour?
















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, ‘Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.’ This situation illustrates a classic case of long-term emotional exhaustion following the dissolution of a toxic dynamic.
The ex-wife’s sudden change in behavior, often called a ‘change-back’ reaction, is common when an abuser loses their source of emotional supply. While her progress in therapy is a positive personal step, the author is under no psychological or ethical obligation to accept these changes as a basis for reconciliation. His decision to prioritize his mental health is a healthy exercise of boundary-setting, as he is protecting himself from the historical patterns that defined his marriage for two decades.
My professional recommendation is that the author maintains his current distance. Reconciliation is a choice, not a debt owed for past patience. He should continue his own therapy to process his recovery from years of gaslighting and verbal abuse, and he should focus on supporting his children through their own healing process before considering any shift in his stance.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


















The author feels a sense of relief and newfound stability since leaving, while his ex-wife argues that her recent therapeutic progress and accountability warrant a second chance at their family life.
The central question for the reader is whether a person is obligated to forgive and return to a partner who has changed after a breakup, or if prioritizing one’s own mental health and history of trauma justifies a permanent end to the relationship.







