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Husband Feels Betrayed After Wife Bans Him From Delivery Room Over Fear He’ll Lose Attraction To Her

by Leona Pham
December 23, 2025
in Social Issues

Childbirth is often described as a shared milestone, something couples imagine experiencing together long before the moment arrives. But when expectations clash with reality, even joyful events can leave behind complicated feelings that are hard to sort through.

In this update, a new father reflects on the aftermath of his wife choosing not to have him present during the most intense part of labor. Although he was there in other meaningful ways, the emotional distance that followed lingered long after they brought their baby home.

As time passed, deeper issues surfaced around trust, insecurity, and how both partners coped with the changes parenthood brought. Now, after separation, counseling, and hard conversations, he is asking whether his hurt and reactions were justified. Keep reading to see how Reddit responded to this emotionally charged update.

One husband hoped to witness the birth of his child, but his wife made a last-minute choice that left him standing outside

Husband Feels Betrayed After Wife Bans Him From Delivery Room Over Fear He’ll Lose Attraction To Her
Not the actual photo

AITA for being hurt my wife won’t let me see the birth of our baby and asking for space?

My wife is 8 months pregnant with our first kid and she has been finalising her birth plan.

She included me in the process and I did my best to research and understand it.

I went with her to see various doulas,

picked a hospital together, established emergency plans etc.

I assumed I would be there for the birth

but she told me she didn’t want me to see my daughter being born.

She only wants her mother there and I could only come in once it’s done to see the baby.

It hurt like hell because I was obviously very excited about it.

I asked why and she just said she’d be more comfortable that way.

I said okay, I told her I’ll let her do whatever makes her comfortable

and I’ll be on board with it but that I’m very hurt

and will need some space for a few days to take it in.

I slept in the guest room and left before she woke up for work

and she’s been blowing up my phone with texts

about how it’s unfair to punish her for doing what’s best for the baby.

She called and she was crying and telling me I’m putting so much stress

on a pregnant woman for no reason and that I'm a**hole for that.

She's so angry I'm wondering if I'm being a d*ck?

Edit : No Covid restrictions for us.

Edit 2 : No we’re not the couple from the other post, my wife works from home,

I don’t work 14h and I was there for every appointment since the beginning.

I don’t think needing space for a few days is wrong of me

and I’m just asking her to let me take in what’s happening.

I can’t pretend to be happy about missing the birth of our baby.

Update 1 : 9/23/2022

My wife had the baby and they’re both healthy.

I asked her on her due date if she still didn’t want me

to be there and she said she wasn’t sure.

She was very stressed during labor and I could tell she was really anxious

so I did my best to comfort her and didn’t ask.

She did ask me to leave when it was time to push and I came back when our daughter was born.

I didn’t catch her, but I got to cut the cord

and I held her first, which I am very grateful for.

Things were okay with my wife for a while until she dismissed how I felt

about missing the birth and said I was making a big deal out of a couple minutes.

I then found out the reason she excluded me was

because she was scared I would stop being attracted to her.

I kinda lost it and I regret it, but I was sleep deprived and told her

that I was disappointed in her as a mother and she put her vanity before our kid and before me.

My wife then asked for marriage counselling, we’re on a wait list for a first appointment.

We’ve been very cold towards one another

when we’re alone and we will probably fight soon again.

I know it’s not the best way to be when we have a newborn

but I can’t help but blame her for this situation.

I will be going back to work soon so I’m hoping the distance work gives me from her

will help me calm down and gather the strength to be more mature about it all..

Update 2 : 1/10/2023

Wife and I separated for a couple months but decided to work on our marriage.

Bigger issues rose to the surface in marriage counselling and wife did apologise

for keeping me out of the delivery room, although she affirmed in the same sentence

that if we have a second child, she’d ask me to stay outside again.

She just will not trust me to not loose attraction to her.

I had never realised just how deeply insecure she is about her looks

and how it affects every part of her daily life.

She’s a pretty woman and she always acted very confident

but it was mostly a facade that completely crumbled with the pregnancy.

We ran into some issues with breastfeeding related to

that where she would eat very little to lose the pregnancy weight

and it caused her to produce less milk, consequently stressing her and the baby out more.

I begged her to postpone her diet until our baby is a little older

but it was so important for her to lose weight first.

I tried supporting her but I was going through my own struggles

and I couldn’t understand how she could put that over the health of our baby.

We’re determined to make our marriage work

and I’m going to do my best to understand her struggles with self image.

I’ve come to accept that seeing the birth of any child I have with her will not be possible.

Many people enter parenthood believing love will protect them from insecurity, only to discover that vulnerability can feel sharper than ever when bodies, identities, and expectations shift all at once.

Moments meant to unite can instead expose fears that were never fully spoken, leaving both partners hurt in ways they struggle to name.

In this story, the husband’s pain wasn’t really about missing a brief moment during labor. Emotionally, it was about exclusion and invalidation.

Being asked to leave during the most intense part of the birth made him feel secondary at a time when he expected closeness, and having those feelings dismissed afterward compounded the wound.

Meanwhile, the wife was experiencing something equally profound: a deep sense of bodily exposure and loss of control. Pregnancy had already altered how she viewed herself, and labor represented a moment where she felt physically and emotionally defenseless. Her choice to ask him to step out came from fear, not indifference.

Looking at this from a different psychological angle shifts the conversation away from “vanity” and toward control and safety. Many women are socialized to believe their worth is tied to desirability, and pregnancy disrupts that belief dramatically. For some, childbirth becomes the point where they try to reclaim agency over how their body is seen.

Men, by contrast, are often taught that being present equals being supportive, so exclusion can feel like rejection rather than protection. These opposing interpretations aren’t personal failures; they’re shaped by deeply ingrained gender expectations.

Experts note that these struggles are common, even if rarely discussed openly.

According to Verywell Mind, body image concerns often intensify during pregnancy and postpartum, sometimes triggering anxiety, restrictive eating, or fear of partner rejection, especially in cultures that emphasize rapid physical “recovery” after birth. These pressures can persist even when partners are loving and supportive.

Similarly, Psychology Today explains that childbirth is a major medical event, not a shared performance. Feeling observed during labor can heighten stress and reduce a sense of psychological safety, which is why many women carefully control who is present during delivery.

Seen through this lens, the wife’s decision was a coping response to fear and vulnerability rather than a judgment of her husband’s devotion. At the same time, his emotional reaction was understandable, but directing that pain toward her during recovery intensified the fracture instead of easing it.

What this situation ultimately reveals is how unspoken fears can quietly shape major decisions. Healing here depends less on revisiting the birth itself and more on addressing the insecurities it exposed: fear of rejection, loss of autonomy, and unmet emotional reassurance.

Parenthood doesn’t require perfection from either partner, but it does demand empathy when vulnerability shows up in uncomfortable ways.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

These commenters stressed bodily autonomy and the need for control during birth

ArkeryStarkery − This is a tough one.

Diet culture is a disease and you're married to a long-term case.

Try this one on for size.

What if you replace "attractiveness" and "vanity"

and "how attractive she is" with "her control over her body"?

She didn't want you in the room for the birth

because she wanted to retain a sliver of control over her body and how it's seen.

She doesn't want to eat enough to breastfeed easily

because she wants to regain control over how her body is shaped.

Does that give you a little more insight?

A lot of times in pregnancy and birth and feeding,

the pregnant person needs some kind of control over a process

that often seems to happen without their input

and this is in loving families with wanted pregnancies!

Very few people get pregnant and then have it go exactly how they wanted, expected and hoped.

No amount of dieting, exercise or anything else will change what a pregnancy does to a body.

And if her pride is in how she looks and the control she has over how she looks,

going through a year or more in which that entire foundation crumbles has to be really rough.NAH.

cityflaneur2020 − Wife is not the AH.

She probably heard stories of men being creeped out

and losing interest in the wife for a while.

A friend of mine witnessed a C-section and was totally freaked out

by seeing the layers being cut and seeing the "inside" of his wife.

They had a dead bedroom for some six months until he got over that.Look, I'm a woman.

Once I saw a video of a birth, with the baby crowning,

and was absolutely TERRIFIED! So probably wife didn't want

to be seen in that state and you should respect her.

Kashmir2020Alex − Birth is not a spectator sport.

Some women don’t want to be seen in such a vulnerable and painful moment!

The husband really needs to respect her decision as it is hers only to make!

This group argued childbirth is medical, not a spectator experience

unsafeideas − I find it completely odd that wife is made into vain evil partner

because she wanted to push alone.

On one hand, I get why you want to be there, on the other,

when it comes to who is in room while going birth and pushing,

she should really be entitle to ask for lonely comfort if she needs that without being willified.

You got to cut the cord and hold baby as first and that is just not enough.

sun_and_stars8 − Look only one person has any right to decide

who is in the hospital room during their medical procedure

and that’s the person having the procedure, your wife.

stuk_in_tuksin2021 − Women literally experience having husbands

who treat them like crap after they witness them pushing their child out of them.

This actually happens and is not exclusive to women

who are insecure or who have low self esteem.

The problem is that people treat child birth as a spectator sport rather

than a serious medical event that affects a women's mental and physical health.

It is a scary and vulnerable time that should be treated as such.

Try understanding that aspect of the situation, get past ego, hurt feelings,

and fomo and quite possibly you can move past this.

They felt the husband centered his hurt on his wife’s recovery

WildExtreme5505 − You don't seem to realize that the issue here isn't that you're hurt,

but that you've been making you being hurt your wife's problem for the last however many months.

There's this idea of rings of support, where when someone is going through a difficult time like an illness

or in this case pregnancy they have concentric rings of support

(people who are close to them, then less close, then even less close, etc.).

The person going through the thing can ask anyone for support.

The people in the support ring give support to the person going through the thing

or more inner circles, and get support from outer circles.

It was fine that you were hurt and needed support, but you should have gone

to a trusted friend or a therapist and worked things through with them

instead of continuously adding stress to your pregnant/postpartum wife

NuketheCow_ − Man, listen: your first update

you said you told your wife “I’m disappointed in you as a mother”.

That, right there, makes YTA.

Your instinct is to say something that is intended to do nothing but hurt someone else.

That isn’t constructive.

It isn’t the kind of statement that brings you and your wife back together.

It’s the kind of statement intended to hurt and nothing else.Be better.

I’ll admit it seems like you’re trying to be,

but I hope you aren’t attending counseling with the idea that you simply need to help your wife.

You need help too and I hope you realize that.

Ladyughsalot1 − Real hard to read you just dismissing your wife’s desire for control

and autonomy over her body during her most vulnerable time as “vanity” Women are told constantly

that men lose attraction if they witness their wife giving birth.

They’re told constantly that “bouncing back” after baby is a priority.

To say her confidence was a facade because she experienced fear at those things

that are shoved at women their entire lives is incredibly out of line.

You still seem arrogant and condescending.

I hope you can learn that this isn’t so much about vanity

as it is about a desire to control one’s body during dangerously vulnerable times.

Oh, and to be cold to her? After she birthed your child,

and by the way you were immediately there to hold baby first and cut the cord….

And you’re concerned she dismissed your feelings? ! She just had a baby.

She just had a major medical event.

She doesn’t need to cater to your preference or your feelings in that time.

And again: you weren’t totally shut out.Just shameful.

And by the way after reading this? I wouldn’t trust you not to lose attraction either,

seeing as the moment she exhibited any sort of self consciousness you call her vain and confidence a “facade”.

Have you considered your reactive and arrogant nature is precisely

what suggests you can’t be trusted not to make a snap judgement about her body that sticks?

These users highlighted postpartum mental health and body-image trauma

Smiley-Canadian − HER (only barely an ESH for her). She desperately needs therapy.

She’s at massive risk for an eating disorder and postpartum depression or anxiety.

She needs to takes this very seriously.

she was wrong to dismiss and minimize your concerns.

You are very wrong to dismiss her concerns.

The fear of you no longer being attracted to her is very, very common.

You should have supported her, agreed to not look, and got therapy for her.

You are not entitled to see the delivery.

It’s a very painful and vulnerable time for a woman.

Things tear, there’s pee, poop, blood, amniotic fluid, and so much more.

Their bodies go through a massive, life altering transformation.

It’s common for women not to want their partners to look.

She is the one delivering the child.

Only she gets to decide who looks at her vulva.

you are wrong to yell at her and guilt her about her decision.

you should have found other ways to support her.

The delivery is about her, not you.

inannaofthedarkness − Your wife’s feelings may seem extreme to you, but they are valid.

Let me share my personal experience.

My (48m) partner did lose his attraction to me (38F) after seeing me give birth.

He told me he would never look at me the same way after seeing my body post partum

and all the things that came out of it; he also has said

that he has struggled to be s__ually attracted to me eve since he saw me give birth.

He is not someone I ever expected to tell me this, much less feel this way.

I was devastated by it.

It likely has ruined our relationship, but he said it so callously

and indifferent to my emotions about what I went through I am flabbergasted.

He also has said many hurtful things about my body

and excused it by saying he can’t help what he is attracted to.

He cannot understand why I’m still so hurt by it.

He also admitted he wasn’t attracted to me at 10 months post-partum

and pressured me to lose the baby weight.

We’re together for now but his careless words destroyed my already fragile self esteem

and now over a year later I still have disordered eating.

The words about him not being s__ually attracted

to me after birth happened just a couple months ago.

Our child is 2 now.

I lost about 25 pounds in a few months earlier this year,

so at less that 18 months post partum I was at my pre-pandemic/pre-pregnancy weight.

I’m now 5’7” and 155, so I know I’m looking good now

and I can tell my partner is attracted to me again

and it just makes me feel worse about the whole thing.

Like he didn’t value my at all unless ai’m attractive to him.

Like he doesn’t care what ai went thru physically

or emotionally to bring out daughter into this world.

I know he didn’t want to marry me when I was overweight,

he was much less kind to me, never took photos of me.

Now I just cannot even see him with love.

Even though mt heart still loves him.

So please listen to your wifes feelings.

This story resonated because it shows how love can exist alongside misunderstanding. Many readers empathized with the husband’s disappointment, while others felt the wife’s fear deserved more patience during an already overwhelming time.

Do you think it’s possible to honor both emotional pain and bodily autonomy without keeping score? Should childbirth be shared whenever possible, or protected at all costs? Share your thoughts below.

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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