AITAH for self pleasuring after my husband said not to?

CombExtra3809 940 comments

She carries the weight of a past marred by trauma, struggling to reclaim her sense of safety and autonomy in a marriage where desire and consent clash painfully.

Her husband’s high s*x drive, once a source of hope for connection, now feels like an unbearable pressure on her fragile boundaries, leaving her caught between fear and the yearning for intimacy on her own terms.

In a moment meant to soothe herself, she finds her sanctuary invaded and her choices questioned, exposing the deep rift in their understanding and respect.

His discomfort over her self-pleasure speaks volumes of their fractured communication, where her needs are overshadowed by his expectations, and the very act of seeking comfort becomes a battleground for control and acceptance.

AITAH for self pleasuring after my husband said not to?
‘AITAH for self pleasuring after my husband said not to?’

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Users Wasted No Time Telling It Like It Is:

The internet jumped in fast, delivering everything from kind advice to cold truth. It’s a mix of empathy, outrage, and no-nonsense takes.

The original poster is facing a significant conflict rooted in mismatched s*xual needs and es**blished boundaries following past trauma.

The core issue is the husband's expectation that his wife must fulfill his s*xual needs, even after a fight, overriding her desire for self-pleasure as a subst*tute for unsatisfying partnered s*x.

Given the history of trauma and the agreement concerning s*xual initiation, is the husband justified in feeling disrespected by his wife choosing self-pleasure over engaging in s*x with him, especially when their s*xual encounters rarely result in her satisfaction?