In a home overtaken by technology, a woman finds herself trapped by the very devices meant to bring convenience. What began as simple smart bulbs and a video doorbell has spiraled into a suffocating maze of smart locks, sensors, and voice commands, leaving her powerless in moments when she needs control the most.
When a crippling migraine strikes and her phone dies, she is left stranded outside, vulnerable and desperate, a prisoner to the cold, unyielding tech that her husband so eagerly embraced. Her breaking point is a raw testament to how obsession with control can strip away the simplest human freedoms.

AITA for telling my husband to choose between me and his smart home obsession?
















As renowned organizational psychologist Dr. Henry Cloud explains, “Boundaries are not about keeping other people out; they are about defining what is acceptable for you.” In this scenario, the husband has created a domestic environment where the OP’s fundamental need for reliable shelter and basic functions (like flushing a toilet or making coffee) is contingent upon complex, often unreliable, technology. This situation moves beyond convenience and into the realm of imposed control and a severe lack of consideration for a partner’s practical needs.
The husband’s reaction—focusing on adding ‘backup systems’ instead of removing the dependency—demonstrates a core issue: a failure to validate his wife’s lived experience. While the OP, as a software developer, understands the tech, her objection is rooted in usability and emotional safety, not technical ignorance. The husband is exhibiting confirmation bias, interpreting her distress as an obstacle to ‘progress’ rather than a critical boundary violation. His dismissal of her migraine and subsequent inability to enter the house highlights a significant power imbalance where his technological hobby trumps her well-being.
The ultimatum, while extreme, appears to be an appropriate last resort when communication and clear emotional distress have been repeatedly ignored. Moving forward, if the husband is willing to reconsider, the OP should advocate for a ‘utility fallback’ rule: any system must have a simple, non-powered, non-app-dependent method for primary functions (entry, basic lighting, essential appliances). A constructive recommendation is for them to agree on zones or devices that must remain analog for emergency reliability before reintroducing complex automation.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.


























The original poster (OP) reached an emotional breaking point due to her husband’s escalating obsession with turning their home into a fully automated smart house, prioritizing technology over basic functionality and her immediate needs. The central conflict lies between the OP’s desire for simple, reliable access to her home and necessary comfort, and the husband’s unwavering belief in technological advancement, leading him to remove standard access methods like a physical key lock.
Given that the husband dismissed the OP’s severe discomfort and focused only on adding more tech as a solution, was the OP justified in issuing an ultimatum demanding he choose between her and the smart home obsession, or did this extreme measure escalate a solvable communication problem unnecessarily?







