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Husband Cuts Off Wife’s Wi-Fi To Force Pregnant Workaholic To Rest, Instantly Sparks Marriage Meltdown

by Annie Nguyen
November 12, 2025
in Social Issues

Workaholics rarely switch off, even when the stakes climb higher than any deadline. A couple with solid careers hit a rough patch when the wife, eight months pregnant with twins, ignored her doctor’s orders to ease up after stress-triggered health warnings.

Her husband watched her skip meals and nod off at the laptop day after day, promising each session would wrap soon. One evening, after another broken pledge, he yanked the Wi-Fi cable to force a break. Read on to see the blowup that followed and the update that changed everything.

A concerned husband disconnects the internet to stop his pregnant wife from overworking against doctor’s orders

Husband Cuts Off Wife’s Wi-Fi To Force Pregnant Workaholic To Rest, Instantly Sparks Marriage Meltdown
Not the actual photo

AITA for shutting off the home wifi so that my wife would stop working?

I (35) have been married to my wife Jen (30) for three years, and before that we dated for six years.

she is also 32 weeks, eight months, pregnant with twins. She's my best friend and I absolutely adore her,

with one minor flaw, she is a huge workaholic or perfectionist.

While we both have very well-paying jobs, Jen's job is way more stressful and time-demanding.

Even though she is brilliant and amazing at what she does, she often works around the clock,

on average, 60-hour weeks, at home and in office.

This wasn't a problem before, but about two weeks ago her doctor told her to take a step back from work,

i.e., go on leave early, because the stress was starting to cause her a couple of health issues,

even though the babies are fine.

However, being the workaholic that she is, she has still been working from her laptop 6-8 hours every day.

Which, fine, I understand that she had a couple of cases that she needed to finish.

But most days she was so focused on work that she was forgetting to eat meals

and falling asleep at her desk.

So, yesterday when I got home, I realized that she had done the same thing again.

I woke her up and told her that she needed to go rest in bed.

She insisted she was fine and said there was an emergency with a client of hers

and she just needed to finalize some things for a coworker.

I asked her just to take a break first and take a nap or eat,

but she said that she would once she was done and that it wouldn't take her more than an hour.

I told her fine, but no longer than an hour even though I was pretty annoyed.

So, two hours later when she was still working, I became frustrated and unplugged the Wi-Fi

and put the cable out of sight. The only purpose of this was to cut her off from work on her laptop

because she clearly had no intention of stopping.

Once she realized, she yelled at me, called me an AH, and she said that I was treating her like a child

and accused me of being controlling, condescending, and "borderline abusive."

I told her that she is being stupid and just to let the coworker that asked for her help to handle it.

I said that she was free to use the mobile hotspot on her phone, or figure out the router herself,

but otherwise I would plug it back in when I woke up, which I did.

She was so mad that she slept in the guest room and when I went to apologize the next morning

for calling her stupid, not for cutting the internet, she said that she can't even look at me.

She hasn't said another word to me yet.

I'm starting to feel like I might have been a bit extreme, even if I only did it out of concern.

but honestly, overdoing it by trying to meet deadlines that she's not even supposed to be responsible for. AITA?

When someone you love is pushing themselves to the brink, fear doesn’t show up quietly. It comes disguised as frustration, urgency, even anger, not because you want to control them, but because watching someone self-destruct feels unbearable.

In this story, both partners are navigating a tender moment: a soon-to-be father terrified for his pregnant wife’s health, and a dedicated professional struggling to let go of her identity and responsibilities. Their hearts were in the right place, even if their communication missed the mark.

Here, OP pulled the Wi-Fi to react to powerlessness after seeing his wife exhausted, forgetting to eat, and ignoring medical advice. His panic turned into control, hoping a forced pause might protect her and their unborn twins.

Meanwhile, his wife wasn’t simply “overworking.” Her career appears woven tightly into her sense of self and competence. Stepping back, especially when pregnant, may feel like losing autonomy, credibility, or even independence. This wasn’t defiance; it was fear on her side, too.

Interestingly, many men react to helplessness with action, even drastic action, while women in similar situations may lean toward emotional communication first. OP’s instinct to “fix” the problem collided with his wife’s need to feel respected and in control of her own choices. Two types of fear met in one moment, and they clashed.

Psychologist Dr. Sue Johnson, known for Emotionally Focused Therapy, explains that control often masks anxiety: when we fear losing someone or losing safety, we may protest through anger or force rather than vulnerability. She writes that when partners feel disconnected or afraid, they don’t shut down; they fight for emotional safety, sometimes in the least helpful ways.

In this light, OP’s reaction wasn’t malicious; it was a misguided attempt to protect his family. And his wife’s anger wasn’t ingratitude; it was a response to feeling controlled at a moment when she already felt pressures beyond her body and career.

The husband’s concern is rooted in love; he cares deeply for his wife, and his actions come from a place of wanting her to rest and prioritize her health, especially for the sake of the twins.

However, his method of cutting off her access to work feels like a breach of trust, and it strikes at a core part of who she is: a workaholic perfectionist. For her, work isn’t just a job; it’s a way to prove her value and cope with stress. Her reaction is not just about the Wi-Fi being unplugged, but about feeling misunderstood and infantilized by someone she loves.

Their later conversation and decision to seek therapy mirrors what experts recommend: not trying to “win,” but learning to understand each other’s fears and soften responses before they escalate.

In relationships, love isn’t the absence of conflict; it’s the ability to repair. How many of us, faced with fear for someone we love, might also act before we speak?

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These Redditors slammed the husband, saying he acted controlling and childish instead of communicating

anthony___fell − YTA. She said that I was treating her like a child. You are.

She accused me of being controlling, condescending, and "borderline abusive". If the shoe fits?

To a certain extent, I get your concern especially if her doctor said to limit stress.

Does she need better work or life balance? Probably.

But the way you deal with that concern is NOT by taking away your wife's autonomy.

That's just unacceptable in a relationship.

And frankly, given that your wife IS a perfectionist and worried about work deadlines,

you probably caused her a lot more stress by cutting her off from the WiFi,

hiding the cable and demanding that she go take a nap like she's a naughty five year old.

LeoMurray2022 − Once she realized, she yelled at me, called me an AH,

and she said that I was treating her like a child and accused me of being controlling, condescending, and "borderline abusive."

Yep exactly that. YTA I get your concerns, but she isn't a child

and shutting off the WiFi is not going to stop her from getting more and more stressed

about the work she has to do and her deadlines.

coitus_introitus − YTA. I told her fine, but no longer than an hour even though I was pretty annoyed.

This right here is controlling and condescending, before we even get to the ridiculous wifi stunt.

Your wife is an adult, and gets to make her own choices.

If you disagree so vehemently with those choices, you can choose to make an issue out of it,

but just unilaterally making the choice for her, over her objections, about her own health,

is everything your wife told you it was, emphasis on the "condescending."

If you think your wife actually has an addiction or a serious problem with her work patterns,

which does sound like a thing you wouldn't be out of line for worrying about,

then you should tell her that and push for therapy, not go behind her back

and sabotage her decisions when you don't agree with them.

ReviewOk929 − YTA I became frustrated and unplugged the Wi-Fi Immature approach to an adult problem.

We don't fix issues by extreme reactions like this. You should have continued to talk to her like an adult

let the coworker that asked for her help to handle it She is a big girl and can make her own adult decisions.

She doesn't need you controlling her work or her internet access I was treating her like a child

You were treating her like a child whilst acting impetuously like one yourself.

Again words and communication work so much better.

These users backed the husband’s concern, prioritizing the pregnant wife’s and babies’ health

melancholywife323 − I'm going against the grain here. She's being irresponsible with her health and health of the babies.

The doctor told her to go on leave early but she continues to work and not really taking care of herself.

No I don't think you're the ah. You are concerned and just want your wife

to follow the medical advice for her safety and that of the babies.

CautiousCanvas − NTA. I get tying up loose ends, but regularly not eating when your pregnant is NOT healthy.

She is prioritizing work at the expense of not just her, but her unborn child.

And then she throws a tantrum because she can't do whatever she wants.

If she wants to act like a child then she gets treated like one. It's that simple.

These commenters called it an ESH situation, urging better balance, teamwork, and communication

nate4721 − Surprised there isn't more ESH here. I have no idea why she's getting a free pass

She sucks because her addiction to work is risking her health, the babies health and their relationship

He sucks because he went about this terribly. Both of them need to learn to communicate

Acki90 − I'm going with ESH. Your wife seems like she needs to figure out a healthy work-life balance

before she does start affecting the child's health and should probably seek some professional psychiatric help

with the whole working so hard she forgets to eat thing. On the other hand, you cutting the Internet didn't help the situation.

It added to the stress, caused problems between you both when you should be working as a team,

and she is right it was controlling.

pinpoe − ESH. Neither of you is making the time or space to find a common ground and path forward.

You're looking at this only as her health, but for her it's her identity and reputation, too.

You could have dinged both of those with this move.

She's looking at this only as a matter of her independence, but for you both it's a matter of your future, safety, and family.

She could have dinged all of those and likely will if she keeps on.

Rather than fuss over who is right and wrong, how are you going to apologize, focus on your shared priorities, and move forward?

These Redditors saw no clear villain, suggesting therapy and mutual understanding moving forward

No_Location_5565 − NAH. If the gender roles were reversed here Reddit would be on your side.

You two need to have a serious conversation. You need to fully understand the implications

that slowing down will have on her career. She needs to listen to her doctor and take the time to take care of herself.

I see this coming to a head when it comes to parenting issues. So talk it out.

Figure out how to communicate. Figure out how to support each other.

Serious_Session7574 − NAH. You're really worried about her, as you are right to be if she is not eating or sleeping well

and is continuing to over work despite the doctor having specifically told her to stop working so much.

Obviously cutting off the internet was wrong of you, and you should apologise for that, don't do it again.

But also explain to your wife that you are extremely worried about her, and the baby.

Would your wife agree to therapy do you think?

This WiFi blackout flipped a health scare into a relationship reset, proving good intentions need words, not wires, to land right. Folks split on the extremism, but the therapy-and-burgers truce won hearts.

Ever pulled a “for your own good” move that bombed spectacularly? Would you hotspot or hash it out first? Spill your partner power struggles below!

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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