Two months prior to the story’s opening, the original poster’s (OP’s) husband of 15 years confessed to having a year-long affair. Following a week of reflection, the OP agreed to attempt reconciliation, and the husband immediately ended contact with the affair partner. Despite the initial agreement, the reconciliation process remained difficult for the OP as she struggled to process the betrayal.
The situation escalated when the affair partner contacted the husband, claiming she was pregnant and providing proof, including blood work and a sonogram. The husband admitted he does not want her to terminate the pregnancy, as it might be his only chance to become a father, which requires him to maintain contact with the affair partner. The OP responded by kicking him out, stating she will not accept co-parenting with the other woman, leading the husband to accuse her of forcing him to choose between her and his potential child.

My husband is having a baby with his affair partner. I want him to choose between me and the baby. AITAH?













According to Dr. Hayden Murphy, a specialist in marital conflict resolution, “Trust, once broken, requires the offending party to accept the full, non-negotiable consequences of their actions, even if those consequences are painful for them as well.”
The husband’s actions—having the affair and subsequently framing the situation as an ultimatum between his wife and his potential child—demonstrate a significant failure in accountability. While his desire to father a child is understandable, especially given the couple’s fertility struggles, leveraging this desire against his wife’s healing process violates the fundamental tenets of reconciliation. Reconciliation requires the remorseful party to prioritize the victim’s emotional safety and boundaries above their own unmet needs stemming from the infidelity.
The OP’s boundary against co-parenting is a crucial element of self-preservation. Accepting co-parenting with the affair partner forces the OP into a lifelong, inescapable relationship dynamic with the source of her trauma, which is often emotionally unsustainable. A path forward requires the husband to first fully accept the OP’s boundaries regarding the affair partner. If he cannot prioritize his wife’s ability to heal within the marriage over his desire to be a biological father through the affair partner, the marriage is likely already over, regardless of the child’s existence.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.












The OP is currently in an extremely painful position, caught between her commitment to saving her marriage and her absolute boundary against including the affair partner in their future life through co-parenting. Her husband believes this boundary is an unfair ultimatum, forcing him to choose between his wife and the possibility of fatherhood, which he desperately desired.
The core conflict rests on whether the OP is justified in refusing to accept a co-parenting relationship as a condition of reconciliation, or if the husband’s desire for a biological child overrides the necessary boundaries for rebuilding trust. Can a marriage survive when the consequences of past infidelity create a permanent, unavoidable third party?







