UPDATE - AITAH for telling my girlfriend I can’t trust her anymore when it comes to her wanting a baby?

No_Situation_9708 1242 comments

In the quiet spaces between their shared moments, a hidden pain festered—a yearning for attention and validation that felt elusive from her own family.

Her choice to fabricate a mis*****age was not born from malice but from a deep, aching loneliness that demanded to be seen and felt.

The silence she maintained was a shield against the vulnerability of truth, a desperate plea for connection in a world that seemed indifferent.

He stood at a crossroads, torn between love and honesty, grappling with the raw reality that the woman he cared for was drowning in her own sorrow.

The fragile threads of their relationship trembled as he confronted the painful truth, knowing that without open dialogue, the foundation between them could not survive. In that moment, the weight of unspoken emotions threatened to unravel everything they had built.

UPDATE - AITAH for telling my girlfriend I can’t trust her anymore when it comes to her wanting a baby?
‘UPDATE - AITAH for telling my girlfriend I can’t trust her anymore when it comes to her wanting a baby?’

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Commenters Came in Hot with Their Takes:

Support, sarcasm, and strong words — the replies covered it all. This one definitely got people talking.

The original poster (OP) is left grappling with a severe crisis of trust and understanding after discovering their partner intentionally induced a mis*****age using harmful herbs, motivated by a deep-seated need for attention and perceived family neglect.

The central conflict lies between the OP's desire to maintain the relationship, supported by their immediate actions to ensure her physical safety and seek professional help, and the extreme, manipulative, and self-endangering nature of the partner's actions.

Given the partner's demonstrated capacity for extreme deception and self-harm stemming from unmet emotional needs, the core question remains: Can a relationship survive when one partner has deliberately fabricated a life-threatening medical event for emotional validation, and what level of ongoing psychological intervention is required before trust can realistically be rebuilt?