For ten years, she poured her heart into a marriage shadowed by betrayal, her spirit slowly eroding as she forgave wounds that never truly healed. He shattered her trust repeatedly, his denials and false apologies a cruel echo in the silence of her growing numbness.
Then, amid the chaos of their daughter’s sudden diagnosis, the weight of his latest betrayal crushed what little hope remained. As she faced the unimaginable challenge of caring for a sick child, she found herself utterly alone—trapped between love lost and the relentless demands of survival.

AITA- Leaving my husband during a life changing event








As renowned relationship expert Dr. Sue Johnson, developer of Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), explains, “The attachment bond is the deep need for connection, security, and safety in a relationship. Infidelity shatters that bond.”
The OP’s situation presents a severe attachment injury layered upon existing patterns of conflict avoidance, which the OP notes contributes to her anxiety and tendency to ‘let things slide.’ The repeated cheating, coupled with the husband’s minimization tactics, eroded the foundation of safety and trust. The recent discovery, occurring simultaneously with the daughter’s Type 1 Diabetes diagnosis, creates a crisis convergence: the external, acute medical crisis overlaps with the internal, chronic relational crisis. Emotionally checking out is a common, albeit temporary, self-protective coping mechanism when a person feels overwhelmed and lacks viable options for escape or resolution. The husband seems to be leaning on the shared medical trauma to facilitate reconciliation, confusing crisis co-regulation with genuine repair of the infidelity wound, which requires accountability and sustained behavioral change, not just shared tears.
The OP’s current state of functional co-parenting under extreme duress while emotionally disconnected is understandable, but it is not sustainable for her long-term mental health. While leaving immediately might destabilize the family unit during the daughter’s adjustment period, maintaining the status quo means sacrificing her identity indefinitely. A constructive recommendation involves seeking individual therapy immediately to build emotional boundaries and agency, regardless of the marital outcome. Simultaneously, the OP should communicate to her husband that while she needs his functional support for the child’s medical care, the relationship is currently operating strictly as a co-parenting partnership until she can secure independent resources or make a final decision, thus refusing to let the medical crisis dictate the timeline for resolving the infidelity issue.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.





























The Original Poster (OP) is experiencing deep emotional detachment and anger stemming from repeated infidelity by her husband, a betrayal compounded by the recent, severe health crisis involving their daughter. Her central conflict is the struggle between her personal need to preserve her own well-being by ending the relationship and the practical, immediate necessity of relying on her husband for support while managing their child’s new diagnosis.
Given the extreme stress and the OP’s emotional withdrawal, the core question is whether it is justifiable to remain physically present for the sake of stability while emotionally abandoning the marriage, or if this emotional distancing is a precursor to necessary, immediate action, despite the timing being acutely difficult for their child’s health management?







