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He Thought He Was Supporting His Grieving Wife. Now She’s Wondering If She Married the Wrong Man.

by Sunny Nguyen
February 28, 2026
in Social Issues

When his mother in law died suddenly from a heart attack, he knew his wife’s world had shifted overnight. What he did not expect was that her grief would turn into doubts about their entire marriage.

He is 33. She is 32. They have been together since college, married for six years. Early on, he told her he had been labeled a sociopath when he was younger. It never seemed to bother her. They built a life together, shared routines, inside jokes, future plans. He believed she understood him.

He Thought He Was Supporting His Grieving Wife. Now She’s Wondering If She Married the Wrong Man.
Not the actual photo

But grief has a way of testing the quiet parts of a relationship. Here is how it all unraveled.

'My wife is considering divorcing me because she feels uncomfortable with me being a s__iopath?'

My M33 wife F32 wants to leave me because she’s recently started becoming uncomfortable with me being a s__iopath.

When we met in college 10+ years ago she didn’t have a problem with this, we connected and eventually got married after 3 years of dating,

but now she’s getting uncomfortable with my disorder because of how I reacted to the death of her mother or my MIL.

Her mother passed away from a heart attack a few weeks ago, and while I tried to comfort her and help her, it’s been hard because I don’t really know...

I didn’t really know her mother that well and she seems extremely sad and it’s been hard for her to function. Did I do something wrong? Because I am trying...

She’s been telling me I’m useless in helping her with this serious crisis in her life, and that all I’m doing is making up fake emotions to try and comfort...

but that’s not true. I’m genuinely trying to help and support her but all she’s doing is pushing me away. Maybe she needs space instead of my help?

She eventually told me that she’s considering divorcing me because I can’t understand how she’s feeling and it doesn’t seem like I care about what she’s going through,

but I do care, I just don’t know how to express that to her. I’m worried she may actually go through with divorcing me.

I do love her and I don’t feel like she’s even giving me a chance to really explain myself. I mean we’ve been married for 6 years!

You don’t just consider ending everything like that over something like this. Right?

When Grief Hit, So Did Doubt

A few weeks ago, his wife lost her mother unexpectedly. The shock was brutal. She was devastated, barely functioning. Crying at random moments. Struggling to sleep. Forgetting to eat.

He tried to help. At least, he thinks he did.

He offered comfort. He stayed close. He said the words he thought a husband should say. But inside, he admits he did not feel what she was feeling. He did not know how to mirror her grief. He did not know what the correct emotional setting was for a moment like this.

He did not know her mother well. He was sad for his wife, yes. Concerned. But the deep, overwhelming sorrow she carried felt foreign to him.

That difference became obvious.

She began telling him he was useless in this crisis. That his reactions felt rehearsed. Fake. That he did not truly care. Eventually she said something that shook him. She was considering divorce because he could not understand her pain.

For him, that felt extreme. Six years of marriage, over this? He insists he does care. He loves her. He just does not instinctively know how to express empathy the way she needs.

And now he is terrified she may actually leave.

Is It Really Sociopathy?

One thing many people pointed out is that he may be using the wrong label. “Sociopath” is not even a formal diagnosis in modern psychology. It has largely been folded into antisocial personality disorder, and even that diagnosis requires a pattern of disregard for others’ rights and feelings.

He does not sound indifferent or cruel. He sounds confused. He wants to help. He just does not naturally access or display emotion in the way she expects.

Some commenters suggested he could be dealing with something like ASD or another condition that affects emotional processing. Others simply noted that empathy is not only a feeling, it is a skill. And skills can be learned.

The real issue may not be whether he feels enough. It may be whether he can show up in ways that translate to her.

The Gap Between Intention and Impact

Grief is chaotic. It makes people raw. When someone loses a parent, especially suddenly, they are not looking for perfect words. They are looking for presence.

His wife may not actually be upset that he did not cry. She may be reacting to the sense that she is alone in her pain.

One commenter who recently lost their own mother said something simple but powerful. After a loss, people push you away. But they do not actually want you gone. They want you to stay.

Stay on the couch. Stay in the room. Take over chores. Make tea. Sit in silence. Hold their hand even if they do not squeeze back.

For someone who struggles with emotional instinct, that kind of practical script can be grounding. Instead of guessing how to feel, he can focus on what to do.

Another user suggested writing instead of speaking. Sometimes emotions are easier to articulate on paper. A letter explaining, “I do not always feel things the way you do, but I am here and I am not leaving,” might land differently than awkward verbal attempts.

Grief Makes Easy Targets

There is also the reality that grief can distort perception. When someone is in intense pain, they often look for something solid to push against. A spouse is safe. A spouse is constant. A spouse cannot walk away easily.

She may be lashing out because he is the closest person in range.

That does not make her threats less scary. But it might explain them.

He sees divorce talk as disproportionate. She may see his emotional flatness as a betrayal at the worst possible moment.

Neither of them is necessarily malicious. They are just colliding in a crisis neither of them knows how to navigate.

Here's the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most commenters leaned toward reassurance. They told him he is not heartless. They told him grief is messy and unpredictable.

lrbikeworks − So I have ASD, and it manifests as, among other things, an emotional disconnect.

Before my diagnosis, I had a counselor tell me he thought I was a s__iopath. Expressing and reading emotions is not something that comes naturally.

I say this so you’ll understand what I mean when I say expressing empathy is a skill that can be learned.

It’s a long process and you’re in immediate need so. . at the risk of sounding pragmatic, here are some tips.

After a loss, people don’t want to be alone. They say they do, and they’ll push you away, but in spite of this, be present as much as you can....

I’m just going to stay right here with you. I’ll be quiet, I won’t talk or do anything, but I’m staying right here.

Little gestures like taking up some of her normal chores around the house are good. If you know her favorite indulgences like candy or ice cream, make sure it’s there...

Draw her a bath if that’s her thing, and sit with her while she soaks. Physical touch is big. Hand holding, shoulder rubs, brushing her hair.

I don’t think she wants to divorce you. She’s a mess, and people say a lot of horrible things. Good luck.

Aztaloth − You keep calling yourself a s__iopath but based on the description here that is not the case.

Sociopathy means you have no empathy and no real direction of right or wrong (or at least not caring about right or wrong).

You sound like a person who struggles with showing emotions and connecting which is very very different.

I struggle with it as well, and am my amazing wife is a very emotional person although your situation seems worse.

You need to have some evaluations for ASD and similar disorders. ​ Your wife needs emotional, support.

You want to give it to her, you just don't know how. Tell her you need her to spell out exactly what she needs.

In the short term take notes if you have to. Set reminders on your phone to text her and tell you that you love her or are thinking of her.

Some people are going to come here and say that you shouldn't need to do that. And I envy neurotypical people like that who don't need it.

LOLIn the longer term a diagnosis will help you figure out what tools you need to use to better show her what you are feeling.

And stop calling yourself a S__iopath, it is reinforcing a lie into your brain. It is the opposite of what you and her need right now. She is hurting. She...

And because if it the hooks are digging deeper in. It is hard, and it will get harder before it gets better, but in the end it will make you...

Some urged him to stop calling himself a sociopath altogether, arguing that the label may be doing more damage than the behavior itself.

GazelleAcrobatics − I have an ASPD diagnosis, so I get where you're coming from.

we just don't process emotion or empathy like other people, and that can be hard for us and those around us . Words, man, use your word , write them...

I know I frustrate my wife with how I am, but I find it easier to express myself with written text vs. talking

ceciliabee − Have you ever seen or used an emotion wheel? They're great even for people with "normal" emotional ranges.

Seeing emotions categorized and kind of broken down really helped me figure out how to describe my feelings. Maybe it could help you understand your wife's?

QueSeratonin − Perhaps it’s not that you can’t help her, but that she knows you’re not capable of the depths of pain she’s feeling.

No amount of masking and learned platitudes will comfort her right now. Acknowledge that, and your intention to support her relationships with people that do further this for her.

You’re not that person; you can be a lot of things and those are probably the reasons she married you, but if you truly are a s__iopath, then you simply...

Others were more blunt. If he truly cannot access the depth of emotion she needs, he may never be that specific kind of comfort for her. And she has the right to decide if that is a dealbreaker.

whitewolf3397 − As somebody who lost their mother a month ago, I can't honestly say that grief is hard and a wild ride.

The best thing you can do right now, is be there. Offer comfort, help where you can, and don't give up. I doubt she walk wants a divorce.

She's upset and frustrated and you're an easy target because, as her husband, you're somebody who can take it and stick around.

Pain makes us push away those we love. Stand like a rock and take it on but don't leave. This hard patch will pass and you'll both come out stronger...

cPB167 − Sociopathy hasn't been a diagnosis in any mainstream diagnostic manual since before 1980. It and psychopathy have been largely subsumed under the cluster b personality disorders, particularly antisocial...

Considering how young you were when you were diagnosed, you may want to see about being re-evaluated. As far as practical advice goes though, I would seriously delve into studying...

There are a number of communication professors and coaches on YouTube that are very good, and many books on the subject.

A good idea would be to just search up something like "how to comfort someone who has lost a loved one" or "how to support someone who is grieving". And...

[Reddit User] − Your wife is lashing out because of her pain. Not knowing how to deal with someone else’s grief is hard for anyone. Keep trying to talk to...

chroniccostumecritic − NTA. Your wife is grieving (understandably) but she needs to understand that most people in general

(even people without any mental or emotional disorders) are not good at relating to people that have experienced a loss.

And because everyone reacts to grief differently, people experiencing the same loss can get angry at each other because they think the way that they are reacting is the only...

For example, when my aunt died, I wanted to keep talking about her and hear stories about her life.

My dad however (she was his sister), clammed up and never really talked about her after she died.

I would get super annoyed at him for that and he would get exasperated that I kept bringing her up. I recommend that your wife goes to grief counseling.

It could give her the outlet that she needs to sort through her feelings while also helping her realize that she cannot rely on others to relieve the grief.

NuanceEnthusiast − OP asks for help with emotions because he has ASPD. Commenters refuse to help OP on the grounds that they’ve determined him to be misdiagnosed

Marriage is not just about love when life is easy. It is about who you become when things fall apart.

He may never grieve the way his wife does. But grief is not a performance. It is about presence. About staying when things are uncomfortable.

The real question is not whether he feels enough. It is whether he is willing to grow enough.

And maybe the harder question is this. Is she willing to see the effort behind his awkwardness, or has the loss changed what she needs from him forever?

 

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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