She had dreamed of a wedding her whole life—a symbol of eternal love and commitment that felt as real to her as breath. Having poured her heart into planning others’ fairytales, she longed for her own moment to be asked the question that would bind her and her partner forever. But every time she dared to voice her hope, his laughter and silence carved deeper wounds, leaving her dreams suspended in painful uncertainty.
Their love had blossomed into a family, a beautiful one-year-old child carrying his name, yet the promise of marriage remained unfulfilled, hanging like a fragile thread between them. The unspoken tension grew heavier with each passing day, as she grappled with the ache of wanting a forever that he seemed unwilling—or unable—to share.

AITAH for wanting to change our child’s last name because my partner has decided he doesn’t want to get married?












According to relationship expert Dr. John Gottman, effective long-term relationships require partners to honor each other’s ‘Love Maps’—deep knowledge of their partner’s hopes and dreams. In this scenario, the husband is actively disregarding a core ‘Love Map’ item for the wife: the desire for marriage and the symbol of a ring.
The partner’s behavior demonstrates a significant pattern of avoidance and potential emotional stonewalling. When the wife brought up marriage, he laughed or changed the subject, effectively invalidating her feelings without direct communication. Agreeing to a proposal timeline, especially after the child’s birth (which itself was conditioned on marriage), and then unilaterally reversing course suggests a major misalignment in commitment timelines and expectations. The husband’s accusation that offering to pay for the ring is ‘bullying’ is a defensive mechanism to shift blame away from his lack of initiative and commitment. Furthermore, the wife is experiencing significant emotional labor and identity crisis, feeling that her relationship is not permanent, which is a valid concern when foundational expectations are unmet.
The wife’s actions were understandable given her long-standing dreams and the repeated broken assurances. However, continuing to push for the ‘symbol’ (the ring/wedding) when the partner explicitly states he does not want to marry creates an unsustainable dynamic. The constructive recommendation is for the wife to stop focusing on the ring and initiate a direct, non-emotional conversation about the fundamental viability of the relationship based on their non-negotiable life goals. If marriage is truly a non-negotiable need for her lifelong happiness, and he confirms he will never provide it, the relationship may have reached its natural limit, regardless of love for the child.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.











He should have been honest that he didn’t want to get married ever, instead of just pushing back the topic. However, Op you shouldn’t be using your child to punish him for not giving you what you want.



The individual is deeply hurt because a long-held personal dream of marriage, symbolized by a proposal and ring, remains unfulfilled after four years and the birth of a child. This created a major conflict between her foundational belief in lifelong commitment demonstrated through marriage and her partner’s persistent refusal to commit to that structure, despite previous verbal agreements.
Given the partner’s final refusal to even accept a ring as a symbol of future commitment, the central question remains: Is it fair to expect a partner to fulfill a deeply meaningful, long-established personal desire for commitment, or should the current stable family unit be sufficient, even if one partner’s lifelong dream is permanently set aside?







