The user, a 27-year-old man (OP), is in a nearly year-long relationship with his 31-year-old girlfriend. The conflict began when the girlfriend requested OP’s Social Security Number (SSN) during a serious discussion.
The girlfriend explained that due to a past relationship involving deception and criminal history, she now requires her friend, who works for the federal government, to run a background check on OP to ensure his safety. When OP refused to provide this highly sensitive personal information to someone he does not know, the girlfriend became upset, stated the relationship could not progress without this step, and accused him of not trusting her judgment in friends.

AITAH For Not Giving My Girlfriend My Social Security Number So She Can Run A Background Check On Me





















In the field of relationship dynamics and personal security, Dr. Finley Bennett is known for noting, “Trust in a partnership must be reciprocal and established through shared actions, not mandated through tests of vulnerability.” This situation highlights a severe breach in establishing appropriate boundaries early in a committed relationship.
The girlfriend is attempting to use emotional leverage, stemming from her prior negative experience, to enforce a security protocol on OP. While her fear is understandable, demanding an SSN—a key piece of identity information—to be handled by an unknown third party crosses a significant line. OP’s refusal is a rational defense of his personal privacy and digital security. His past experience working for the federal government further validates his skepticism that employment status guarantees trustworthiness.
OP’s action of leaving the discussion was a necessary, if temporary, way to de-escalate a situation where he felt pressured and emotionally manipulated. The path forward requires the couple to address the underlying trauma without making it a condition of commitment. They must agree on acceptable, less invasive methods for building trust, or acknowledge that their fundamental expectations regarding privacy and relationship progression are incompatible.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.
















The core conflict involves a direct clash between the girlfriend’s need for security, driven by past trauma, and OP’s fundamental right to protect his private information from unknown third parties. OP respects her need to feel safe but refuses to compromise on personal data security, leading to a standstill where the relationship’s progression is conditional on his compliance.
Should the progression of a relationship depend on the disclosure of an SSN to an unknown acquaintance, even for perceived safety reasons? The debate centers on whether past trauma justifies demands that infringe upon personal privacy boundaries, or if OP is correct in maintaining strict control over his critical data.







