When your partner is carrying your child, you expect arguments to be hard. You do not expect every disagreement to end with her threatening to end the pregnancy. For weeks, that threat hung over 25-year-old Jake like a weapon.
Then one night, after another casual argument about money, he snapped and told her to go ahead and make the appointment if that was how she really felt. Four days later, she is still refusing to sleep in their bed, calling him heartless and disgusting.

Now he is wondering if he went too far or if he simply reached his breaking point.
















Jake and his 22-year-old girlfriend had been together for a while and felt their relationship was getting stronger before the pregnancy news came. The baby was not planned, but at eight weeks along, they both agreed they would try to make it work.
She already struggled with anxiety, and the pregnancy seemed to be making everything more intense. Jake tried to be understanding. He knew hormones and fear were at play. But the threats started coming almost every time they disagreed.
Money problems, feeling unsupported, even something as small as wanting to stop for fast food on the way home, it did not matter. If she got upset, the words came out: “I might as well get rid of it,” or “We clearly aren’t ready, I’m just going to make an appointment.”
Each time it hit Jake like a punch to the gut. He felt helpless, manipulated, and exhausted. He would usually apologize quickly, try to calm things down, and walk on eggshells to avoid setting her off again. But the threats kept coming.
The latest argument started over something minor. She asked to stop at McDonald’s. Jake said they needed to start saving money and kept driving. That was all it took.
She brought up the pregnancy again, saying they would not have to worry about finances if she was no longer pregnant. This time Jake lost his patience. He shot back with something like, “Then go ahead.
What’s stopping you? Or do I need to schedule the appointment for you too, since that’s how things work now?”
She exploded. She screamed that he was heartless, that he did not understand her at all, and that she hated him. She said he disgusted her.
For the past four days she has been sleeping in the nursery room or on the couch instead of their bed. Jake has tried to talk to her and apologize for the way he said it, but she refuses to engage.
He is walking on eggshells even more now, unsure if his words crossed a line that cannot be uncrossed.Jake knows pregnancy is incredibly stressful. He understands her anxiety is probably through the roof.
But the constant use of the pregnancy as leverage in every fight leaves him feeling trapped and emotionally drained. He wonders if what he said was cruel, or if it was the only way to make her see how her words were affecting him.
The situation is messy on every level. Bringing a child into a relationship where threats like this fly so easily feels dangerous for everyone involved, including the baby. Jake’s frustration is understandable.
No one wants to feel like their future child is being used as a bargaining chip. At the same time, telling a pregnant woman to “go ahead” with termination, even in the heat of the moment, is heavy.
Emotions are raw, communication has clearly broken down, and both of them seem overwhelmed by the reality of what is coming.Reddit had plenty to say about this one.

Many said neither of them appears ready to become parents and urged the couple to seriously consider whether bringing a child into this environment is fair.






Several pointed out that if she is already using the pregnancy as a threat now, the pattern could continue after the baby arrives, with the child potentially becoming the new pawn in arguments.




A few emphasized that abortion existing as a legal option is exactly for situations like this, where two young people are clearly not prepared.






The tone was blunt but concerned, with repeated advice to break up, seek counseling, or at least delay any decisions about keeping the pregnancy until the relationship stabilizes, if it ever can.In the end, this story leaves a heavy feeling.
Jake reached the end of his rope after weeks of emotional whiplash, but his words landed hard on a pregnant woman already struggling with anxiety. She feels attacked and unsupported. He feels manipulated and exhausted.
Whatever happens next, one thing is clear: a baby deserves more stability than what this couple is currently offering each other.Was Jake wrong for snapping back, or was he simply refusing to let the threats continue?
And more importantly, should two people in such a volatile relationship even be trying to raise a child together? Sometimes the kindest choice is recognizing when you are not ready, no matter how difficult that truth is.

















