A 29-year-old woman (OP) has been struggling with her 27-year-old boyfriend’s persistent habit of calling her “dumb” or “stupid.” This behavior started as what he claimed was a joke, but it escalated to become his regular way of addressing her, even in front of his friends who began mimicking the habit.
Despite the OP’s requests for him to stop, the boyfriend dismissed her feelings, labeling her as too sensitive. The conflict reached a peak during a party the OP hosted for her work colleagues, where the boyfriend insulted her in front of senior professionals. When one colleague publicly defended the OP by pointing out the boyfriend’s lack of comparable professional achievements, the boyfriend became enraged at the OP for not defending him, leading to a confrontation at home. The central question is whether the OP was justified in allowing her colleague to publicly defend her, thereby letting the boyfriend experience similar humiliation for his past actions.

AITAH for letting my boyfriend get a taste of his own medicine?



















In the field of interpersonal dynamics, Dr. Reese Butler is known for noting, “Emotional durability is often tested not by external challenges, but by the consistent, subtle erosion caused by a trusted partner’s casual disrespect. This is often labeled as normalizing abuse.”
The boyfriend’s behavior clearly fits the pattern of gaslighting and belittling, where he trivialized the OP’s distress by labeling her as “too sensitive.” This tactic is designed to maintain control and avoid accountability for harmful communication patterns. When the OP hosted the party, she essentially provided a stage where her professional competence, which the boyfriend constantly undermined, became public currency. The senior colleague intervened not just to defend the OP, but to establish a clear professional boundary against inappropriate conduct, using logic and objective status (credentials) to counter the boyfriend’s subjective insults.
The OP’s reaction—stating, “So now you know how it feels”—while emotionally understandable, constitutes a form of reactive retaliation. While the humiliation was a direct consequence of the boyfriend’s persistent actions, allowing a third party to deliver the blow often complicates conflict resolution. A more constructive path, although potentially slower, would have been for the OP to address the final incident herself, clearly stating the boundary was crossed and linking it directly to years of prior ignored requests. However, given the depth of the emotional damage, the colleague’s intervention served as an undeniable wake-up call regarding the severity of the boyfriend’s behavior in a setting where the OP’s reputation was paramount.
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The OP is now facing the fallout from a situation where she allowed a colleague to retaliate against her boyfriend’s long-standing verbal abuse during a professional event. The conflict centers on the difference between the boyfriend’s expectation of loyalty, even when he is behaving poorly, and the OP’s desire for self-respect and the end of constant public embarrassment.
The situation forces a decision regarding boundaries and accountability in the relationship. Was the OP correct to stand by while her colleague confronted the boyfriend, creating a moment of reciprocal public discomfort, or did this action cross a line into unnecessary cruelty, making the OP complicit in his humiliation?







