AITA for wanting to divorce my MtF wife?

A 44-year-old woman has spent nearly 17 years married to her spouse, who began transitioning to female (now 47 MtF) ten years into the marriage. They share three children, a home, pets, joint finances, and a supportive partnership in practical ways—caring for each other during illness, late nights, and small daily moments. She initially embraced the transition as inspiring and authentic, and the family openly discussed transgender experiences with the children, who responded positively. Seven years later, the marriage remains emotionally turbulent.

She cries often, feels profoundly lonely despite antidepressants, grieves the loss of her husband, and misses the comfort and intimacy of a male partner. Physical closeness has been rare, awkward, and unsatisfying for nearly a decade, leaving her feeling isolated even beside her spouse. While she still loves her spouse as a person and co-parent, she is no longer “in love” and questions whether staying in this unfulfilling marriage or leaving to seek a compatible male relationship makes her the greater asshole.

‘AITA for wanting to divorce my MtF wife?’

The marriage was solid for the first decade before the transition began.

My spouse (47 mtf) and I (44 f) have been married for almost 17 years. When we got married she was male presenting. We have three kids.

We own a house, have pets, and take good care of each other in the ways that matter. We share expenses, bank accounts, all that regular stuff.

She supported the transition despite initial conflict, and the family adapted openly.

Ten years into our marriage my spouse began to transition to female. I was conflicted, but wanted to be supportive. Honestly, it was really inspiring seeing her become the person...

A lot changed, in good ways, bad ways, and ways I’m not even sure about. We are very open and transparent with our children about transgender experiences and LGBT+ issues.

Before her transition, we’ve taught our children that love is love. That people, regardless of how similar or different than yourself, deserve your respect. They were really great with the...

The long-term emotional and physical toll has left her deeply unhappy and questioning her choices.

Anyway, our marriage became rocky in the beginning of her transition, not that that’s a surprise. But it’s been almost 7 years and I still feel that turbulence. I cry...

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I started antidepressants, which help just a little. I miss my husband so much. I miss the comfort of a man. I am so filled with sorrow that I try...

I hate when people say s__t like, “you’re a good person for staying because she’s the same person you married.” B__ch, no! She is not the same person and it...

She’s completely different. She doesn’t just look and dress differently, she speaks differently, she touches me differently, she wants different things out of life now. She is not the same...

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But worse, I don’t feel like a good person for staying. I know this is the right subreddit to post in. I just can’t decide if I’m more of an...

As I mentioned, we have three kids, a house, pets, blah blah blah. It would be so much chaos and difficulty to leave. She doesn’t want me to leave. We...

Besides, like I said, we take care of each other in ways that matter. When we’re sick, if one of us has to work late, when there’s a problem, when...

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All that being said (and this is a true a__hole confession) I don’t love her. No.. I love her, but I am not in love with her and haven’t been...

When we have tried, it’s been awkward and confusing. I feel like I’m just pleasing myself next to her while she is doing the same. It’s not intimate, it’s lonely...

We haven’t made love, not just making ourselves c__, made love since before she transitioned. It’s been probably 9 or 10 years. My god, I miss it!

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So… I know I’m the a__hole. But is it for staying and pretending to be happy or is it for wanting to leave and maybe find what I’m missing in...

The woman’s sorrow is legitimate: she entered a heterosexual marriage, built intimacy and connection around that dynamic, and now lives in a partnership that no longer aligns with her needs. The near-decade-long absence of fulfilling physical and emotional intimacy, persistent loneliness despite mutual caretaking and medication, and grief over losing the male partner she married are valid reasons to reevaluate the relationship.

Acknowledging that her spouse is authentically different now—not the “same person in a different body”—respects the transition while honestly naming the loss of the original partnership. Some perspectives might highlight the value of companionate love, shared history, and stability for the children, suggesting sacrifice for the family unit. Yet remaining in a chronically unfulfilling marriage risks modeling emotional resignation for the kids and deepening her own depression.

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The broader view is that authenticity matters for both partners: one has transitioned and found her true self; the other deserves the opportunity to pursue romantic and sexual fulfillment that matches her orientation. Divorce in this context can preserve mutual respect, effective co-parenting, and individual happiness without erasing the family bond.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

The social network overwhelmingly labeled the woman NTA, affirming that sexual orientation incompatibility is a completely valid reason to end a marriage.

[Reddit User] − You are allowed to divorce anyone, at any time, for any reasons. “My spouse is a woman and I do not want to be married to a...

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[Reddit User] − Hi, dear. 36 MtF here, 16 years post transition. So, some honest perspective: You’re not required nor expected to change because your partner does. Anyone who says...

If *you* decide you’re happy with this? Wonderful. If you decide that you love your partner as their more authentic, newly-found self? Wonderful.

But it’s okay for relationships to end. It’s normal for relationships to end. This is just part of life. You’re not the bad person here; neither is your partner.

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You both can still co-parent for the children you both love and cherish. You can still be a family, despite these changes. *You can still be friends, even. * At...

It’s okay for you to seek happiness and feeling more complete. Your partner already has…and everyone cheered for you supporting them the best ways you knew how to. Now, it’s...

MorsOnAPaleHorse − Nta. Your husband is dead and you’re in completely different relationship now.

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CosmicContessa − NTA. You married one person, but are married to a different one, presently. She gets to live her most authentic life, and so do you. Good luck. 💙

Several responses, including from trans individuals, emphasized that no one is obligated to remain in a relationship that no longer fits after a partner transitions.

gringaellie − NTA sounds like you want to be married to a man, and she isn't a man. That's surely gender reaffirming for her to hear?

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Sleepy-Forest13 − If you're not bisexual, you're not bisexual. When I transitioned, my highschool sweetheart and I eventually broke up. He just didn't like men like that. We're still friends.

chez2202 − NTA. You said at one point that you take care of each other in ways that matter, and it’s clear that you DO take care of each other...

and you have done an amazing job of helping your children navigate this whole process. But there IS something else that matters. You are a heterosexual woman.

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You have spent almost a decade without having a satisfying s__ual relationship. It’s time to stop thinking of everyone else and remember that your needs are important too.

You cannot continue to be unhappy just so that everyone else is happy. Life doesn’t have to be a constant sacrifice.

modern-disciple − Oh hunny, you are a straight woman who needs a husband, not a wife. Stop taking those antidepressants just so you can stay in one-sided loveless marriage.

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BOTH of you should feel supported in this partnership. This isn’t how you describe this situation though. You deserve happiness as much as your wife does!

A couple of commenters focused on the unfairness of lifelong sacrifice and the need for both partners to find happiness.

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Cute-Profession9983 − NTA and you've already put in enough time with a person who isn't the person you married. Their happiness shouldn't come at the price of your misery

leerypenguins − Unless you’re bisexual, I think it makes sense that your marriage doesn’t make sense. Your husband is, for lack of a better term, dead. And this relationship is...

This post lays bare the long, quiet grief that can follow a partner’s transition when one spouse’s romantic and sexual orientation remains unchanged. Supporting authenticity is admirable, but it does not require sacrificing one’s own fulfillment indefinitely. Divorce here can be an act of mutual respect—allowing both partners to live true to themselves while preserving co-parenting and family ties.

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Have you ever supported a partner through a major identity change that altered your relationship? How do you weigh personal happiness against family stability when intimacy and romantic love fade? Do you believe companionate marriages can sustain long-term without resentment, or is romantic/sexual compatibility essential? Share your thoughts below.

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