When you’ve rebuilt your life from scratch more than once for a partner, the thought of doing it yet again can feel like déjà vu, but not the romantic kind. One 27-year-old woman took to Reddit’s AITA forum after her boyfriend asked her to quit the job she finally loves so he could chase a “dream career” two hours away.
This isn’t their first move. Over the years, she’s left jobs, friends, and even her family’s town to accommodate his career frustrations. Now settled in a role that energizes her, surrounded by a supportive community, she fears another relocation could send her back into the depression she faced last time.
But her boyfriend claims she’s selfish, pointing out that he pays most of the bills. Is she wrong for saying no this time? The full backstory paints a much more complicated picture.
One woman’s newfound happiness at her dream job turned into a relationship clash when her boyfriend demanded another move for his career













Frequent relocation to support a partner’s career is not inherently unselfish but it becomes problematic when only one partner’s needs are consistently deprioritized. According to Psychology Today, moving for a partner should involve more than convenience or appeasement; it should reflect shared commitment and mutual benefit, not just repeated resets for one person’s “better life” with little regard for the other’s well‑being.
True compromise is also at play. Licensed marriage and family therapist Claudia de Llano describes compromise as collaborative, not one partner always conceding. She emphasizes that healthy relationships involve mutual respect and adjustments, not chronic sacrifices on one side that breed resentment.
Moreover, relocating repeatedly without addressing underlying dissatisfaction is unlikely to bring sustained happiness. As Verywell Mind notes, repeated one-sided sacrifices can leave the “giving” partner feeling undervalued and frustrated, especially when their own small triumphs (like OP’s connection with her job and newfound community) are overshadowed by the constant churn of moving.
In this case, G’s pattern of burning out across jobs suggests the issue might not be location or title—it may be deeper career mismatch or internal discontent. OP is justified in fearing return to depression without the anchors of purpose and belonging she’s built here.
A neutral, constructive path forward would start with a heartfelt but low-pressure conversation: Acknowledge G’s longing for his previous work, but make clear that uprooting yourself again would compromise your hard-won stability and emotional health. Propose exploring alternatives: Could he commute long-term? Could he test returning part-time? Couples counseling may help unearth whether his job dissatisfaction stems from place, role, or something unresolved.
This isn’t about refusing to support a partner but about building a life together in which both partners’ happiness and growth are equally valued. The real question isn’t “Am I selfish?” It’s, “Do we respect each other’s fulfillment enough to slow down, listen, and move forward together rather than endlessly in circles?”
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
These Redditors called out his kid-dangling manipulation, urging her to stay in a job that brings her happiness




These users noted his pattern of job dissatisfaction, suggesting he’s the issue, not her refusal to move





These commenters proposed long-distance or counseling, warning his “grass is greener” mindset could persist











The OP’s choice boils down to preserving her hard-won happiness versus enabling another relocation cycle for a partner who hasn’t found contentment anywhere. While he sees it as loyalty, others see it as losing herself to his whims.
Is it selfish to want stability after years of upheaval, or is it finally drawing a healthy line? And if compromise isn’t on the table, can this relationship withstand two very different definitions of “home”? The comments make it clear: sometimes the kindest “yes” is actually a firm “no.”









