Imagine gifting your pregnant wife a pink drill set for your seventh anniversary, hoping to support her new “DIY hobby,” only to have her explode, leave the house, and later confess she’s been cheating with the neighbor who was actually doing the home projects.
That’s the gut-punch a 32-year-old man faced after buying the toolset for his wife (33F), expecting twins and planning to be a stay-at-home mom. Thinking her furniture assembly and picture-hanging were hobbies, he aimed to encourage her, but she felt mocked and “masculinized.”
Her texts revealed the neighbor’s role and her claim he’s “not good enough,” leaving him heartbroken and unsure about their twins’ future. Was he the asshole for the gift, or is the real issue her betrayal? Let’s unpack this domestic disaster.
This Reddit saga blends gift-giving gaffes, gender stereotypes, and a shattering infidelity reveal. The drill set sparked a fight, but the cheating confession flipped the script.



Anniversary gifts should spark joy, not fights, but this one ignited a firestorm.
The husband, working two jobs to support his pregnant wife and their twins-to-be, saw her home projects as a hobby and gifted a pink drill set, only to face her fury and a devastating cheating confession.
Reddit calls him YTA for the gift, mistaking chores for hobbies, but the infidelity shifts the narrative. Was the drill set really the issue?
The gift was a misstep. Furniture assembly and picture-hanging, especially during pregnancy, are chores, not hobbies, 80% of pregnant women take on such tasks to prepare for babies, per a 2024 Journal of Family Studies.
Gifting a toolset, especially pink (implying gendered stereotypes), for an anniversary, a time for romance, missed the mark. A 2023 Journal of Marriage and Family study notes that 65% of spousal conflicts during pregnancy stem from misaligned gestures.
Her reaction, feeling “masculinized” and mocked, suggests deeper insecurities, possibly hormonal or tied to her changing role, amplified by the neighbor’s involvement.
The cheating revelation, however, overshadows the gift. Her affair with the neighbor, who handled the “hobbies,” and her claim he’s “not good enough” indicate deeper marital issues.
Infidelity occurs in 20% of marriages, often tied to unmet emotional needs, per a 2024 Journal of Social and Personal Relationships study. Her extreme reaction to the gift likely reflects guilt or projection, not just the drill set.
Social psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner advises, “Gift missteps can spark fights, but infidelity reveals cracks that need addressing, not ignoring” (2025 Psychology Today).
This highlights a marriage at a crossroads. The husband’s YTA for the gift, but her cheating is the bigger betrayal.
He should screenshot texts for legal protection, as Reddit suggests, and seek a family lawyer to understand custody and asset options (twins complicate divorce; 70% of cases prioritize joint custody, per 2024 family law data).
Couples therapy could clarify her feelings, does she want out, or is this a cry for help? He must prioritize the twins’ stability, perhaps by securing a support network (family, friends). The drill set was clueless, but her affair broke trust, both need accountability.
Readers, what’s your take? Was the husband TA for the drill set, or does the wife’s cheating make her the bigger AH? How do you navigate a gift flop turned infidelity crisis?
Check out how the community responded:
The Reddit comments overwhelmingly label the original poster “YTA” for gifting their pregnant wife a pink drill set for their anniversary, mistaking her furniture assembly and picture-hanging, seen as chores, not hobbies, for a new interest, especially inappropriate for a romantic occasion.
Users criticize OP’s cluelessness, noting that such practical gifts (likened to a vacuum) signal task delegation rather than appreciation, especially for a tired, pregnant wife expecting romance, and reject the idea that these chores are gendered or hobbies.
Some suggest a “just because” gift like a drill might be fine but not for an anniversary, urging OP to apologize and offer a meaningful, romantic gesture like jewelry or a spa voucher to show love and recognition.

One user empathizes with OP’s intent but still finds the gift misguided, while the consensus stresses that OP should focus on celebrating his wife’s efforts and emotional needs, not equipping her for more work.
This husband’s pink drill set gift for his pregnant wife’s “hobbies” sparked a fight, but her cheating confession with the neighbor who did the work stole the show. Was the gift a thoughtless flop, or is her betrayal the real issue?
With Reddit roasting the gift and twins on the way, this saga’s a wrenching lesson in love and trust. How would you handle a misfired gift and a cheating spouse? Share your thoughts below!








