The user, a 29-year-old woman married for five years with three children, is facing a conflict with her 35-year-old husband regarding permanent birth control. The user has experienced significant physical strain from three prior pregnancies, all delivered via C-section, compounded by a chronic illness and high-risk issues like eclampsia during the pregnancies.
After welcoming their youngest child five months ago, the couple agreed the family was complete, with the user insisting her husband get a vasectomy. While she provided him with necessary information three months prior, and even received a promise on Mother’s Day that the procedure was imminent, the appointment remains unscheduled. This lack of action has led the user to refuse intimacy, resulting in her husband accusing her of “weaponizing her pussy,” leaving her questioning if her insistence on precautions makes her the asshole.

AITAH for telling my husband I won’t have sex with him?


















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a critical breakdown in shared responsibility regarding reproductive health, turning a mutual agreement into a point of conflict centered on boundary enforcement.
The husband’s reaction, labeling the OP’s refusal to engage sexually as ‘weaponizing her pussy,’ minimizes the very real physical risks she faces. The OP’s three high-risk pregnancies and ongoing chronic illness mean that abstinence is not a punitive measure; it is a necessary health and safety precaution. Her refusal to ‘mother’ him by scheduling his appointment is a healthy assertion of her own limits, recognizing that the responsibility for sterilization now falls squarely on him, as she has already endured the physical toll of gestation and delivery.
The OP’s action of abstaining is appropriate given the immediate and severe health consequences another pregnancy would carry for her, and the husband’s proven procrastination. Moving forward, rather than solely relying on withdrawal of affection, the OP should clearly state that the boundary remains until proof of scheduling (like an appointment confirmation email) is provided, framing it as a non-negotiable medical necessity rather than a relationship game.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.























The original poster (OP) is firmly standing on a boundary established for her physical and emotional well-being, refusing sexual intimacy until her husband secures a vasectomy, which is necessary given her history of high-risk pregnancies. Her husband, however, views her insistence on this necessary precaution as coercive behavior designed to manipulate him into taking action.
The central debate is whether the OP is justified in using abstinence as a non-negotiable boundary to enforce reproductive safety agreed upon by both parties, or if her husband is correct in perceiving this as an unfair tactic to force his compliance. Is the wife justified in using sexual abstinence to ensure her health and prevent another high-risk pregnancy when the husband has failed to act on his commitment?







