AITA for wanting to leave my husband because he refused to give me a massage?

A woman in her mid-30s, married nearly a decade with young kids, has put up with a lot: emotional distance, endless TV watching, feeling lonely in her own marriage. But severe back pain pushed her to the edge when her husband not only refused a simple massage but snapped at her for “moaning” about it.

She’d nursed him through a fractured ankle while heavily pregnant, battling COVID, and solo-parenting. Now, barely able to move her neck or sit up, she asked for basic help after his long day. His response? His feet hurt from standing at work, no one massages him, and he didn’t want to hear it. To twist the knife, he sold furniture online and expected her to handle the pickup—while she’s in agony. This wasn’t just about a massage; it felt like proof he wouldn’t show up when she truly needs him.

‘AITA for wanting to leave my husband because he refused to give me a massage?’

The buildup of resentment has been years in the making:

I know it sounds ridiculous but hear me out. We’ve been married close to 10 years and in our mid 30s. He struggles to express his feelings fine. Wants to...

The one thing that I’ve always been so anxious about though is him not being there when I really need him. When he fractured his a__le over a year back...

and ensure he was relaxing whilst I watched our small child, battled covid and looked after him at 8 months pregnant. Somehow I got through that period. I don’t expect...

The current crisis hit suddenly and hard:

Two days ago I woke and stretched my back and felt a sudden pain. The pain was bad . My lower back was fine but from the back of my...

I’m guessing I’ve pulled a muscle but the pain is so intense with just even me sitting up. It seemed to have got worse when I stood up last night...

His reaction crushed her:

When he came from work yesterday I mentioned it. I waited a few hours so he could rest before asking if he could possibly give me a quick massage. His...

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I told him it he asked me to I would. He snapped and shouted that I’ve been moaning about my stupid back since he came home and he didn’t want...

ince having kids Im used to having aches and pain here and there that I barely notice or take medication for it. It’s rare for me to be like this...

I rang my mother and brought it up and she’s asked me come over so she can give me a massage with some cream that helps with pain. (She suffers...

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We’ve been through so much together and and I’ve forgiven so much but I don’t know if I can get over this. My worst fear is me getting sick or...

To top it off he’s waited until he’s at work to let me know that he’s sold a bed (we’ve already dismantled) and this random man will be picking it...

This bed is upstairs. I’ve told him I can barely flipping move never mind move around furniture. After snapping he’s decided he’ll come and bring it downstairs on his break....

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This isn’t about a 10-minute massage—it’s the culmination of unbalanced emotional labor and support in a long-term relationship. When one partner consistently shows up (nursing through injury, pregnancy, illness) while the other withdraws or lashes out during vulnerability, resentment builds. Relationship therapist Esther Perel often highlights how small refusals erode trust, signaling “I won’t be there for you.”

His dismissal and yelling point to poor conflict skills and possible empathy gaps. Chronic pain amplifies everything; needing help isn’t “moaning”—it’s human. The furniture sale timing feels inconsiderate at best, controlling at worst.

Leaving over this alone might seem extreme, but if it’s the tipping point revealing deeper incompatibility (emotional unavailability, unequal caregiving), reevaluating makes sense. Counseling could uncover if he’s capable of change, but only if he’s willing. Prioritizing her well-being and modeling healthy partnerships for kids is valid. Many thrive post-divorce when the alternative was constant one-sided effort. Support networks—like her parents—matter immensely.

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Here’s what the community had to contribute:

The overwhelming response: she’s not the asshole, and this goes way beyond the massage request:

Imaginary_Pianist346 - NTA. Doesn't sound like this is about a massage, rather there's plenty of history that's led up to this point.

Trailsya - We’ve been through so much together No. YOU have been through so much, while he was never there when it concerned you.

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Plumb789 - I once instantly broke up with a boyfriend who said: “Why are you always asking how I feel? That’s my own business. And why on Earth do you...

But it’s on the same spectrum. You need a relationship with the kind of connection that YOU need. NTA.

Countrygirl353 - NTA, your husband sounds like he’s used to you doing everything for him and taking you for granted. He’s verbally abusing u to shut u up in order...

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Meal-Entire - I’m sorry but I don’t think he likes you. .

dreamsinred - NTA- BTW nothing you mentioned in your first paragraph is actually okay.

Medical_Gate_5721 - NTA He's a selfish p__ck. Divorce him and watch as he backs away from parenting because it's too hard.

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Downtown_Confection9 - He's neglectful, yells at you for asking for help, and is no help with anything at all. You're his bang slave.

Luxifer1983 - NTA and sorry to break it to you, he doesnt love u at all.

ButterflySorry39 - NTA. You deserve so much better for yourself. And your children deserve better.

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WA_State_Buckeye - Honestly, he doesn't sound like much of a life partner, nor any other type of partner.

Disastrous-Panda5530 - NTA. This isn’t about the massage. It’s just the straw that broke the camels back.

Friendly_Afternoon19 - Oh my God, GO! I was with a man like this, they suck the life out of you! By the way, it's not about the massage, it's the...

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Small acts of care build marriages; repeated refusals tear them down. This pain—physical and emotional—highlighted a partnership that’s lopsided.

Leaving isn’t “over a massage”—it’s over years of feeling unseen. Many urged therapy or exit, but all agreed: she deserves reciprocity. Have you hit a breaking point over something “small” that revealed bigger issues? Would you stay and fight, or walk for your peace? Share below—we’re listening.

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