Secrets in relationships often sit like ticking clocks, silent but heavy, waiting for the moment they’re revealed. One Reddit user found herself stuck between protecting her past and protecting her future. At 35, happily engaged to her fiancé of two years, she carried a secret: three years earlier, she had spent four months working as an escort.
She didn’t see it as a trauma story or a shameful past, just a brief chapter she had closed. But she admitted the guilt of not telling him gnawed at her. Should she keep it buried forever, or risk her future marriage by being honest?
The responses poured in, with many insisting honesty was non-negotiable. Eventually, she decided to come clean. And what happened next left both her, mand Reddit, breathing a sigh of relief.
One bride-to-be admitted she’d been keeping a major secret from her fiancé: a brief stint working as an escort years before they met



After about 2 weeks, OP gave an update in another post:

Secrets in long-term relationships rarely stay buried forever. While many people argue that “the past is the past,” therapists caution that withholding significant details, especially those tied to intimacy, can erode trust if revealed later.
Dr. Pepper Schwartz, professor of sociology at the University of Washington, explains: “Trust is the bedrock of a healthy relationship. It’s not the facts of the past that usually cause damage, it’s the deception or omission that partners struggle to forgive.”
This doesn’t mean everyone is obligated to disclose every private detail. Research in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships suggests that disclosure depends on how much a secret might affect the other person’s sense of shared reality and decision-making.
In marriage, partners expect honesty about aspects of life that could shape identity, values, or sexual health.
Former sex workers themselves have spoken openly about stigma being a bigger challenge than the work. As Dr. Teela Sanders, a criminologist who has studied sex work for decades, writes: “The problem is not the work itself, but society’s judgment, which often denies people the ability to move forward without prejudice.”
For this fiancée, the core question isn’t whether escorting was “wrong,” but whether keeping it hidden would eventually undermine the trust her partner assumes exists.
As many commenters pointed out, telling him sooner, as she ultimately did, allows both people to decide if their values align. His supportive reaction shows that while stigma is real, love and honesty can outweigh it when handled with respect.
Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:
Many Reddit users called OP a jerk for withholding and cited a case where late discovery led to divorce

However, one claimed OP was not wrong

Another thought no one was the jerk and praised her awareness and suggested a gentle reveal (which she followed)

In the end, OP’s honesty didn’t shatter her relationship, it strengthened it. Her fiancé’s acceptance showed that love can outshine stigma, and that secrets often feel scarier in our minds than they do in reality. Still, the Reddit consensus was clear: when it comes to marriage, transparency is essential. Better to risk honesty than to gamble with a lifetime of “what ifs.”
So, readers: would you want to know if your partner had once been an escort, or does the past stay in the past?









