Pregnancy changes a lot of things, but feeling supported by your partner shouldn’t be one of them. When someone is preparing to bring a child into the world, they need patience and understanding, not pressure, not lectures, and certainly not decisions made over their voice. Unfortunately, this mom’s experience went in the opposite direction.
Her husband pushed the idea of a home birth from the very beginning, ignoring her fears even when she begged for a hospital delivery. What followed was a long, painful labor that left her shaken long after the baby was born.
Scroll down to see how this argument has stretched on for weeks and why she now feels the birth of her daughter was taken from her.
Husband forces a home birth against his wife’s wishes, leaving her traumatized afterward







































The birthing parent’s sense of safety is not optional. Labor is an intense physical and psychological ordeal, and when someone’s fears or boundaries are dismissed, the result can be traumatic, long-lasting, and deeply damaging to trust.
In this story, both partners feel hurt but only one endured medical risk, physical agony, and a complete loss of autonomy.
From OP’s perspective, her reaction makes complete sense. The CDC warns that childbirth can become dangerous quickly and that delayed access to medical care significantly increases the risk of severe maternal morbidity, including hemorrhage, infection, and complications requiring emergency intervention.
OP was already afraid because her previous birth nearly killed her. Her instinct to go to the hospital was rooted in legitimate, scientifically supported concerns.
Her experience of three days in labor, including 22 hours in active labor, is not medically typical.
The Cleveland Clinic explains that prolonged labor raises the risk of exhaustion, infection, fetal distress, and postpartum complications. OP’s fear that “something was wrong” wasn’t emotional exaggeration, it was her body signaling distress.
Psychologically, her trauma aligns with symptoms described by the Cleveland Clinic.
Birth trauma occurs when a birthing parent feels unsafe, unheard, or powerless; signs include panic, distress, crying throughout labor, or a sense of emotional detachment after delivery. OP’s tears, fear, and inability to bond immediately reflect this.
Her husband’s behavior, refusing to take her to the hospital, calling the doula instead, ignoring her pleas, and speaking condescendingly, matches what the APA describes as trauma-exacerbating conditions: lack of control, invalidation, and coerced exposure to distress. He took away her agency during a medically vulnerable moment.
His later reactions, eye-rolling, dismissing her pain, and saying she “isn’t trying to be strong”, only deepen the wound. Strength is not the ability to endure preventable suffering; strength is recognizing danger and advocating for safety.
OP’s statement that he “ruined the birth” isn’t cruelty; it is a factual reflection of trauma created by disregard for her safety and autonomy.
Check out how the community responded:
These commenters warn OP is in immediate physical danger and must escape now












This group says the husband is abusive, dehumanizing, and the marriage is unsafe








These Redditors emphasize medical autonomy and say forced home birth is reckless































These commenters urge OP to set boundaries, report the doula, and avoid future births with him

























This commenter demands OP file police reports and document abuse immediately



So what now? Should she draw a hard boundary before considering another pregnancy, or is this a breaking point for the relationship itself? How would you rebuild trust after something this huge? Share your thoughts below.









