She is caught in the relentless grip of pregnancy rhinitis, a constant cloud of congestion that steals her joy and energy. As she battles this invisible struggle, her husband’s impatience pierces through, turning what should be moments of connection into a silent battlefield.
In the fragile space between love and frustration, harsh words are exchanged, revealing the deep gulf of misunderstanding. Her plea for empathy clashes with his exasperation, leaving them both wounded and questioning who is truly at fault.

AITA for calling my husband an idiot because he keeps saying that I’m allowing my pregnancy rhinitis to ruin everything ?f



As renowned family therapist and researcher Dr. John Gottman explains, “The primary cause of divorce is the inability to repair after a rupture.” This situation illustrates a minor but significant rupture where both parties resorted to personal attacks rather than focusing on the underlying issue: the OP’s illness and the husband’s unmet need for connection.
The OP’s experience of pregnancy rhinitis is real and physically draining, justifying a reduced capacity for social engagement. However, calling her husband an ‘idiot’ and demanding he experience pregnancy before criticizing her attitude escalates the conflict beyond the immediate problem. This behavior is defensive and dismissive of his feelings. Conversely, the husband’s frustration, while perhaps understandable from a desire for normal interaction, was expressed poorly by criticizing the OP’s attitude (‘ruining everything’) rather than validating her physical state first. He shifted the focus from ‘how can we cope with this together’ to ‘you are causing a problem.’
The OP’s immediate reaction was inappropriate because it involved a personal insult and invalidated his emotional response entirely. A more constructive approach would have been to state clearly, “I am so congested I can barely talk; I can play for a few minutes, but I can’t be very engaging right now.” For future issues, both partners need to focus on ‘I’ statements regarding their needs and feelings, rather than assigning blame or making demands based on shared experience.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.

































The original poster is experiencing significant physical discomfort due to pregnancy rhinitis, leading to emotional exhaustion and reactive communication with her husband. The central conflict arises from the husband’s expectation of enthusiastic participation in activities despite the OP’s genuine physical limitations, which the OP countered by dismissing his frustration based on his lack of shared experience.
When a partner’s health condition severely limits their capacity, is the other partner justified in feeling frustrated by the resulting change in dynamic, or does the non-affected partner have an obligation to accept the limitations without complaint? Where should the line be drawn between supporting a partner through illness and expecting interaction?







