Ginny’s world is cracking beneath her feet as she wrestles with betrayal and confusion. A loving wife and devoted mother, she built her life on trust and shared values with Harry, only to discover hidden secrets that shatter her sense of security. The man she admired, who vowed to leave behind his past, now walks a path that threatens to unravel their fragile family bond.
Caught between love and disappointment, Ginny grapples with the raw emotions of anger and hurt while trying to protect their innocent daughter. Her unwavering principles clash with the reality of Harry’s choices, leaving her desperate for clarity and hoping to salvage the life they dreamed of together.

AITAH for asking my husband to stop smoking weed?




























According to Dr. Terri Givens, a specialist in marital and family therapy, trust is the bedrock of partnership, and secrecy regarding substance use, particularly after agreeing on boundaries, severely erodes this foundation. In this situation, the husband’s recurring use of cannabis, even in small amounts, impacts the relationship far more because of the associated deception than the substance itself.
The core conflict here involves differing interpretations of ‘impact.’ The husband perceives his use as a private coping mechanism—a need for decompression time that he mistakenly believes is isolated from the family unit. However, the wife correctly identifies that parental responsibility extends to the environment and safety around the child (concerns about residual smoke, impaired judgment, and driving while potentially impaired). His justification that ‘what you don’t know won’t hurt you’ is a classic avoidance tactic that dismisses her legitimate emotional and safety concerns, shifting the focus from his behavior to her reaction.
The wife is not exhibiting unwarranted ‘control’ but is setting necessary boundaries based on her interpretation of risk and agreement violation, which is amplified by the high-stakes environment of new parenthood. A constructive path forward requires the couple to move past accusations and establish clear, measurable safety protocols for any agreed-upon use (e.g., mandatory waiting periods, separate location, immediate hygiene changes) or, ideally, find alternative, non-substance-related methods for the husband to manage stress that do not involve potential breaches of trust.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.


















































The wife is caught between her deeply held personal values regarding substance use and the reality of her husband’s recreational habits, especially concerning their infant daughter. Her distress stems from a feeling of betrayal due to secrecy and significant anxiety over the perceived safety risks to the child and the family’s financial stability due to potential job loss.
Does a partner’s personal recreational use, when kept secret and involving a minor safety risk, constitute a fundamental breach of marital trust that justifies the other spouse setting strict boundaries, or is this an issue of controlling behavior overriding an adult’s right to private activities?







