The individual, a 22-year-old woman, is currently juggling a full-time job and postgraduate studies, making the possibility of pregnancy a significant threat to her future goals. She lives in a separate apartment during the week due to her work location, spending weekends at home.
During a recent weekend, she left her essential medications, including birth control, at home, meaning she stopped taking them on Sunday. After informing her boyfriend that the risk of pregnancy was higher and the pill would need about a week to become fully effective again, she requested they use condoms for that week. When he refused because he dislikes the feeling, she stated they would have no sex until the medication stabilized, leading him to accuse her of not trusting him, causing her to question if she was wrong for refusing.

AITAH for not wanting to have sex with my boyfriend since he refuses to wear a condom?








As relationship therapist and author Esther Perel notes, “When we stop listening to the other person’s needs, we start to assume they are being difficult, when in fact, they are just trying to communicate something important to them.” This situation centers on a fundamental imbalance between one partner’s non-negotiable physical health needs and the other partner’s comfort during sex.
The boyfriend’s immediate reaction of refusing condoms due to ‘not feeling nice’ and the subsequent accusation that the poster ‘doesn’t trust him’ demonstrates a failure in both empathy and communication. The poster clearly explained that the issue is medical—her contraception is temporarily compromised—not a reflection of her trust in him. His comparison of using a condom to eating food ‘in its wrapper’ minimizes her legitimate, high-stakes concern about unplanned pregnancy, which could derail her education and career aspirations.
The poster’s action to insist on abstinence or barrier protection during this high-risk week was appropriate because bodily autonomy and reproductive health decisions are solely hers. In the future, constructive handling would involve the boyfriend acknowledging the medical necessity first, perhaps suggesting alternative forms of intimacy during the transition week, rather than immediately centering his own immediate physical comfort over her established long-term plans.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.















The original poster is in a difficult position where her necessary health precautions, directly linked to her career and life plans, conflict with her boyfriend’s sexual preferences. She has prioritized preventing an unplanned pregnancy, which she views as a critical risk, while her partner reacted with upset and accusation instead of understanding.
Is the poster entirely at fault (AITAH) for temporarily halting sexual intimacy until her necessary contraceptive measures were reliably in place, or is the boyfriend’s insistence on unprotected sex overriding her clearly stated health and life safety concerns?







