Pregnancy can place an enormous physical and emotional strain on a relationship, especially when both partners feel like they need extra care and support. Ideally, couples work together through the difficult months, but that balance can quickly disappear if one person feels they are carrying the entire load alone.
The original poster is 14 weeks pregnant and says her husband has developed a series of unexplained health problems that seem to leave him unable to help around the house.
As his list of ailments has grown, he has continued refusing medical treatment while expecting her to manage their home and young child by herself. Eventually, she reached her breaking point and issued an ultimatum. Read on to find out what happened.
A pregnant woman reached her breaking point after her husband refused to seek help for constant health complaints













Few things create resentment faster than feeling alone while carrying a responsibility that was meant to be shared.
Pregnancy already places significant physical and emotional demands on one partner, so when the other partner repeatedly becomes unavailable, it can leave the expectant parent wondering whether they are carrying not only a baby, but the entire household as well. The hurt often comes less from the illness itself than from feeling unsupported.
In this situation, the OP’s frustration does not appear to stem from one weekend of back pain. She describes a pattern that began early in the pregnancy, with her husband experiencing a series of symptoms that increasingly prevented him from helping with childcare and household responsibilities.
Headaches became stomachaches, which became severe back spasms that allegedly left him unable to walk. At the same time, he repeatedly refused medical evaluation despite claiming symptoms serious enough to remain in bed for extended periods.
That contradiction is what intensified the conflict. If the pain is genuine, it deserves professional assessment. If it is not severe enough to seek treatment, it understandably becomes difficult for a pregnant partner to accept carrying nearly all of the physical and mental workload alone.
A different psychological perspective is that this situation may not be as simple as deciding whether the symptoms are “real” or “fake.” Some expectant fathers experience what researchers call Couvade syndrome, in which psychological stress surrounding pregnancy is accompanied by genuine physical symptoms such as nausea, headaches, abdominal discomfort, fatigue, or back pain.
Those symptoms are real to the person experiencing them. However, genuine symptoms do not remove the responsibility to seek help when they become disabling.
Whether the cause is physical, psychological, or a combination of both, refusing evaluation while expecting a pregnant partner to compensate indefinitely places an unsustainable burden on the relationship.
The Cleveland Clinic explains that Couvade syndrome is a recognized phenomenon in which expectant partners may develop pregnancy-like symptoms believed to be associated with stress, hormonal changes, and emotional adjustment.
Although it is not considered a formal medical diagnosis, persistent or severe symptoms should still be medically evaluated to rule out underlying illness.
Verywell Mind likewise notes that chronic stress and anxiety can produce genuine physical symptoms, but professional assessment is important whenever those symptoms significantly interfere with daily functioning or caregiving responsibilities.
Viewed through that lens, the OP’s ultimatum appears less like punishment and more like a response to an impossible situation.
She is not demanding that her husband never become sick. She is asking him to either seek appropriate medical care for symptoms that he describes as disabling or stop expecting her to shoulder every responsibility while pregnant.
If his pain is genuine, he deserves treatment and support. If stress is contributing to his condition, that also warrants attention rather than avoidance.
Healthy partnerships are not measured by whether both people always feel well. They are measured by how they respond when one person’s needs increase.
Seeking help, medical or psychological, is often the most caring choice, both for the person suffering and for the partner who has been carrying more than their share for far too long.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
These Redditors said real pain requires medical care, not avoiding responsibilities














This group believed he was seeking attention and using illness to escape helping











This commenter suggested his behavior may come from childhood patterns of receiving attention through illness



Could stress or sympathetic pregnancy be contributing, or has illness become his escape hatch from responsibility? Was the doctor-or-parents boundary fair, and what should happen if he continues refusing help? Share your diagnosis of the relationship below.

















