He Finally Landed His Dream Job, But His Fiancée Refuses to Leave Her Disrespectful Father Behind

We all know that moment when a major life breakthrough feels like it should be a shared celebration. For one ambitious engineer, a six-figure job offer and a fresh start should have been the ultimate victory after years of overcoming past struggles. Instead, it became the battleground for his entire relationship.

His fiancée, deeply tied to a father who actively disrespects her partner, dropped a major ultimatum: turn down the dream career to stay in her hometown, or else. As the pressure mounts to conform to her family’s demands, he finds himself questioning if love is enough to bridge the gap between his future and her past. Curious how this career ultimatum unfolded? The full story is right below.

He Finally Landed His Dream Job, But His Fiancée Refuses to Leave Her Disrespectful Father Behind

My Fiancée [F31] expects me [M27] to end up exactly where she wants, and I feel like there is no compromise in the relationship. Can our relationship still work?

The foundation of this conflict rests on a dramatic transformation—one partner sprinting toward the future while the other remains firmly rooted in the past.

Before I start, I know we need couples therapy because this is a messy situation. We have our first session scheduled already. I just would like some more data from...

Most recent one is 6.5 years old. After this happened, I have been totally sober, got a BSE and an MEng, and have been working as an engineer for a...

We stayed together until I graduated, then I moved across the country for a job offer (I had been working remotely for this company after my internship for $50k a...

I thought this was the safe move and, of course, it would be difficult for me to choose exactly where my career starts with my past record. My fiancée has...

Her entire family is there (they lived in a trailer for ~8 years together with 6 kids and 4 dogs—that kind of family), and they are all kind of in...

He always tries to make me uncomfortable at family gatherings, which he is always invited to.

He told me I did "not have his permission" when we moved in together, and in a recent string of emails (he refused to talk to me on the phone),...

He says keeping his daughter close is "essential," that I need to "ask for forgiveness to him and to God," and has said stuff in their family group chat that...

ADVERTISEMENT

In their past, he has also asked my fiancée for financial assistance when she was 15, 16, and 17 years old, because he refused to have a job and "work...

I painted his house for him, cook for him and his family at gatherings, and have genuinely never been mean, rude, or condescending EVER in my lifetime to him, but...

I am also frustrated that he is still invited to these family events and trips and stuff, even when he has treated me like this (and everyone knows it) and...

ADVERTISEMENT

She says to me, "Yeah, he is crazy, but he's my dad and I love him so much and will never cut him out of my life" (exact words).

With a clear path to financial stability finally in hand, the reality of their differing priorities suddenly crashes into sharp focus.

That being said, I recently tried applying to many jobs in her home state (400+ applications), where I got no hits. I am searching for jobs because my current one...

ADVERTISEMENT

I did get an offer (my "dream job" with a large company, 401k match and benefits, good salary, cheap COL) a little south of where I live currently. I only...

I told my fiancée about it, passed the background check—although my convictions DID show up—and it looks like I am moving there in a month to start this new job....

She tells me to "start looking for a job here in a year," and talks about this like it's a temporary thing, no matter how many times I tell her...

ADVERTISEMENT

In my mind, I really need her to be OK with moving with me for the next few years until I can get some experience and trustworthiness under my belt...

She also recently got a new puppy in her home state without asking me about it at all, which I was pretty pissed about.

I think it's a combination of things: me worrying about her dad and how that dynamic will look if we live there and are married, the fact that I am...

ADVERTISEMENT

We have talked about all this and she is supportive of my move, but still expects me to "re-evaluate" and essentially move to her in a year. It's tough right...

tl;dr: I am a 27M engineer with old drug/alcohol convictions (6.5+ years sober) and engaged to 31F who has never left her home state. I moved across the country for...

She won't move and keeps telling me to "look again in a year. " Her dad is openly hostile to me (religious guilt-tripping, refused to give blessing, intentionally makes me...

ADVERTISEMENT

This complicated standoff perfectly illustrates the hidden cost of marrying into a deeply entangled family structure. Mental health professionals and family therapists frequently identify this pattern as family enmeshment, a dynamic where personal boundaries are blurred, and individual autonomy is sacrificed for the sake of the family unit.

In these scenarios, the adult child often struggles to separate their own identity and future from their parents’ demands, leading to severe friction when a romantic partner enters the picture. The father’s hostility isn’t just personal; it acts as a protective mechanism to keep the existing family system intact. When a partner offers financial independence and physical distance, it threatens the deeply ingrained patriarchal control.

For the original poster, navigating this requires establishing firm personal boundaries. A practical step would be attending the scheduled therapy sessions with a specific focus on defining what a healthy separation from the family of origin looks like. If the fiancée remains entirely unwilling to compromise or recognize the toxic family dynamics, he may need to seriously evaluate if their long-term visions are fundamentally incompatible.

ADVERTISEMENT

Navigating the intersection of career aspirations and deeply rooted family dynamics is rarely straightforward. While therapy may offer a space to establish boundaries, the fundamental differences in their visions for the future remain a significant hurdle that requires mutual effort to overcome. Do you think he should compromise on his location for the sake of the relationship, or is her refusal to leave her hometown a dealbreaker? And how should a partner handle a toxic in-law who refuses to show basic respect? Share your thoughts below!

Community Opinions

Reddit came in hot, with nearly unanimous voices urging the engineer to choose his hard-earned career over a relationship tethered to a hostile family.

u/copperfrog42 You are right, there IS no compromise in your relationship. It’s her way or the highway, take your off ramp now, it’s not going to get any better.

ADVERTISEMENT

u/Shelby_the_Turd Dude, you are at a fork in the road: One path is you end the relationship. It’ll be hard, but you will recover and forge a new path in...

u/glutenisnotmyfriend So, as my biological father tells it, he went through a similar situation with my biological mother's father. They wanted to stay together after I was given up for...

u/firefly232 Even if your fiancée would be willing to move where you are, I dont think you should stay in the relationship.   And this is purely down to the way...

ADVERTISEMENT

u/z-eldapin Her compromise is a hard no on anything that doesn't bring you to her. That's not a compromise. Let her go, telling her she has an idea of herofeocation...

u/AsburyParkRules You’ve done so much to grow and improve yourself. Don’t saddle yourself down with a family that will continually try and drag you down. Your fiancée doesn’t seem to...

u/madhouse-manager You're young. You worked hard on yourself and your career and turned your life around. You matured, in terms of your values, your education, and financially. You know what...

ADVERTISEMENT

u/JosieJOK You know, I'm a homebody who still lives in the general area where I grew up, and that situation sounds claustrophobic even to me! I wouldn't want to be...

u/PerformerMindless100 You must take the job! If she can’t “cleave” to you as her future husband- in line with her father’s religious beliefs- you need to move on.

u/kaldaka16 I do not think your fiance is capable of having a healthy relationship until she at least manages to put some distance between herself and at least her father....

ADVERTISEMENT

u/No_Scarcity8249 She will sabotage your entire life to stay tethered to her family. You will never escape. You will never get out. No one will ever progress. In your field...

u/SnooWords4839 I wouldn't live near her family. she isn't willing to shut her dad down and expects you to just join in the enmeshment. Your job is going forward, and...

ADVERTISEMENT

u/dirtyphoenix54 You are young enough that you should care more about your career than this woman. Her family is a load on you and she is too enmeshed to ever...

u/kathryn_sedai In a marriage you need to prioritize each other. It’s sounding to me like she puts her family and a new dog ahead of you. Not a good sign.

u/ThisKayGirl77 Her father hates you because you're his "competition". He refused to work after he lost his real estate and asked his teenaged daughter for money. Now she has a...

ADVERTISEMENT

A few commenters also pointed out that her sudden adoption of a puppy was a glaring sign she had no intentions of ever compromising.

Navigating the turbulent waters between a hard-won career and a deeply entrenched family dynamic is incredibly complex. Both the desire to maintain family ties and the need to build an independent, financially stable future hold weight in any serious relationship.

Do you think the engineer should take the leap and move for his dream job, or did his fiancée make a fair point about staying close to her roots? And if you were forced to choose between a partner’s hostile family and your career, what would you do? Drop your thoughts in the comments below!

ADVERTISEMENT
Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *