AITA For Leaving In The Middle Because It Was So Awkward?
A woman in her 30s runs away midway through their third date when her boyfriend’s obscene, robotic, pornographic language—repeating “daddy” and “little girl” ad nauseam—turns passion into creepiness. What started as a promising emotional connection dissolves into a Freudian farce that almost makes her laugh.
Complicating the story is her genuine openness to exploring her sexual preferences, which feels forced, unnatural, and a violation of boundaries. She stops, expresses discomfort, and leaves—and then wonders if giving up midway makes her a bad person.

‘AITA For Leaving In The Middle Because It Was So Awkward?’
Chemistry online doesn’t survive the bedroom audition.


A loop of scripted phrases kills the vibe.


She exits with kindness—but still feels guilty.

Consent and comfort are non-negotiable—even mid-act—and inappropriate kink scenarios without prior negotiation violate consent. The man’s dirty talk, repetitive performance—clearly taken from porn—bypass real-time feedback and emotional resonance, turning intimacy into theater. Opposing views may call her departure “rude,” but sex educators emphasize: any participant can pause or stop at any time for any reason. Socially, gaps in erotic knowledge lead men to view fantasy dialogue as universal; in fact, the D/s dynamic requires explicit, conscious negotiation of roles, safe words, and boundaries.
What complicates the story is their earlier talk of “exploration,” which he misinterprets as general permission. Kink educator Midori warns: “Sharing fantasies without discussion is coercion by omission; real domination begins with consent, not a surprise scenario” (from Wild Side Sex). Laughter during sex often signals separation—her body is on alert.
Ultimately, leaving is a show of dignity, not cruelty. She communicates, he apologizes—it’s done. No medal needed; just check more carefully next time.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
Users crown her NTA and roast the robotic “daddy” routine.




Several blame porn illiteracy and praise her boundary enforcement.




A few commend her communication and call out missing D/s protocol.




The woman’s mid-coitus exit is universally hailed as empowered, not rude. Community verdict: porn isn’t a playbook, and “daddy” spam without negotiation is a hard stop. She protected her comfort and modeled healthy consent.
When should kink talks happen—before clothes come off? How do you screen for porn-scripted partners without killing chemistry?
