In the quiet unraveling of their shared life, a husband bears the weight of silent pain and mounting resentment. His tireless efforts to build a future are met with distance and withdrawal, as his wife drifts through a storm of trauma and confusion, leaving their connection frayed and fragile.
Amidst the chaos of unspoken words and fractured trust, he grapples with the aching reality of loneliness in marriage. The delicate threads of hope hang by a thread, as they navigate counseling sessions and tentative steps forward, each struggling to find a way back to each other in the shadow of crisis.

AITAH for refusing to pay my wife while we are separated?













As renowned relationship therapist Dr. Nedra Glover Tawwab explains, “A boundary is a limit you set for yourself, not for someone else.”
The situation described involves significant emotional and financial strain, exacerbated by the wife’s unaddressed trauma manifesting as self-isolating behavior and relationship detachment. The original poster’s decision to monitor and subsequently restrict access to spending apps (changing passwords, removing her from services) and then stopping discretionary cash payments represents an overreach into controlling behavior, even if motivated by deep resentment over financial inequity and emotional neglect. While the OP’s feelings of being exploited while working three jobs are valid—representing a breakdown of the perceived partnership agreement—the direct, unilateral removal of funds crosses into setting an external boundary through punitive action rather than establishing a clear, communicated boundary for self-protection.
The counselor’s assessment that stopping payment could be seen as abuse highlights the power imbalance created by the OP holding the sole financial levers, particularly when the wife is already in a vulnerable state due to trauma. A more constructive approach would have involved clear communication regarding the financial structure moving forward, perhaps proposing a temporary budget review in light of the separation, rather than immediate cessation tied to past grievances. The OP should focus on establishing firm, respectful boundaries around their own labor and finances, while continuing to meet agreed-upon essential shared responsibilities, rather than using financial support as leverage for emotional compliance or retribution.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.
















The original poster is experiencing intense anger and resentment due to the significant financial and physical sacrifices made while their estranged wife is seemingly avoiding necessary trauma recovery and expressing enjoyment in single life. The central conflict arises from the OP’s decision to immediately halt discretionary weekly financial support in response to this situation, a move their counselor labeled as potentially abusive.
Considering the OP’s extreme work ethic supporting both parties versus the wife’s current lack of commitment to recovery and the relationship, is the OP justified in immediately stopping the $150 weekly allowance, or does this action cross a line into punitive or abusive behavior, especially when they continue to cover all other essential household expenses?







