AITA for saying “F U” to my wife for her medical advice to me?

A 35-year-old father diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea lashed out at his wife, telling her “F*ck you” after she dismissed his $900 CPAP prescription as wasteful and blamed his phone use instead. With an 18-month-old at home and decades of groggy mornings, he finally pursued a sleep study that confirmed the condition, only to face fierce opposition from his medicine-skeptic spouse.

In addition, what makes the story more complicated is her resentment over sleepless nights since childbirth, coupled with their hoarded savings exceeding a year’s income. He uses his phone to manage existing insomnia, while she insists doctors are profit-driven and predicts he won’t even use the machine. The blowup left them silent, the appointment canceled—until he quietly reordered the CPAP anyway.

‘AITA for saying “F U” to my wife for her medical advice to me?’

Chronic exhaustion finally drove the poster to seek professional help after years of feeling drained.

This weekend, I (35m) took a sleep test for the first time in my life. My wife (36f), is a skeptic of American medicine and has been upset with how...

So to start, we have an 18 month old baby that we take care of, but I wake up groggy and grumpy every day and have been for decades. So...

The diagnosis confirmed obstructive sleep apnea, but the treatment cost ignited marital fury.

Now, I got the results back 2 days ago, and it came back positive. Obstructive sleep apnea. I wasn't surprised. What did surprise me was the price of a machine,...

My wife was livid. She told me that it's too much to pay, that I have student loans to pay off, that she's been saving all this money just for...

She says that since I sleep heavily, I might sleep better than she does. So last night, she was saying all I need to do is "Don't be in your...

I was tired of her always thinking she's smarter than doctors so I abruptly said "F*ck you." and stormed out of the room.

Tension lingered into the next day, with communication shut down and the appointment scrapped.

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Now it's today. I cancelled the appointment, I'm not expecting anything to get better, she is still not speaking to me, and I'm wondering if I'm wrong here. AITA?

Clarifications revealed financial security, deeper skepticism, and the poster’s insomnia cycle.

Edit 1: to clarify, we have more than a year's income in savings, so at this point we are hoarding money. Also, she told me it was "just doctors trying...

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Lastly, I do use my phone at night, but only to combat existing insomnia. So if I get a good night's rest, I am less likely to overuse coffee to...

Edit 2: I'm only 130lbs, so it's clearly not a weight/diabetic issue. We have two beds, one in the master bedroom and one in the basement across the house, so...

It's not the first time I've sought medical help (she doesn't really believe in psychology or therapy) and she pushes back on every decision, so I admit I snapped and...

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Defiance won out as the poster took action despite the rift.

Edit 3: I've gone ahead and ordered a machine.

Edit 4: I now own a CPAP machine.

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Sleep apnea isn’t mere snoring—it’s a potentially fatal disorder demanding urgent intervention.

The poster’s 5.1 breathing stoppages per hour and 89% oxygen dips signal moderate obstructive sleep apnea, raising risks for hypertension, heart failure, and stroke. Untreated, it strains the cardiovascular system nightly; CPAP therapy restores airflow, slashing those dangers by up to 60%. His wife’s phone-blame ignores diagnostics—screen time worsens hygiene but doesn’t cause airway collapse. Her cost objections ring hollow amid ample savings, revealing control or denial over evidence-based care.

Counterarguments concede phone reduction aids general sleep but won’t resolve apnea; some fault his crude outburst, urging calmer assertion. Others note her postpartum exhaustion merits empathy, yet dismissing his health echoes a pattern of rejecting therapy and psychology.Socially, this exposes tensions when one partner distrusts modern medicine, endangering family welfare. As Dr. Michael Grandner, director of the Sleep and Health Research Program at the University of

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Arizona, states, “CPAP is the gold standard for obstructive sleep apnea; delaying treatment for financial or ideological reasons can lead to irreversible damage” (source: American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 2024 guidelines).

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Most social media users backed the poster’s need for the CPAP, stressing its life-saving role over cost or phone habits.

rebekha − NTA. A sleep apnea machine is a CPAP machine. You need it to help you breathe. If a physician says you need that machine, then you NEED that...

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TIRED_ICU_NURSE − Get the machine! Nurse here and sleep apnea is a huge risk for cardiovascular disease and sudden death. $900 is a small price to be there for your...

Allaboutbird − NTA, and please do get the machine. Sleep apnea isn't just about sleep and snoring - it can actually put a huge strain on your heart over time...

jrayholz − NTA. Actually angered by the people calling this a draw. Boohoo, some screen time doesn’t contribute to the best sleep. And? Sleep apnea KILLS. The _fuck_ with the...

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I’d buy the damned machine… and the next stop would be a divorce attorney’s office if their next words aren’t, “I love you, and of course you need to do...

A few offered nuance, agreeing on treatment while advising better communication and screen limits.

Wandering_aimlessly9 − You’re wrong. Rebook the damn appt. Sleep apnea kills people. It’s not just something that makes you tired! It increases your risks of cardiac issues as well. It...

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Rebook the appointment now! !! And second. She is correct. You will sleep better if you are off your phone and tv for an hour leading up to bedtime. HOWEVER…not...

TsuDhoNimh2 − NTA Except for the F\*ck you part . .. sleep apnea KILLS PEOPLE slowly. If you get a GOOD night's sleep with the CPAP machine you will have...

and wake up feeling alive. I've seen the before and after diagnosis with friends; ADDING: Taking care of your health is very seldom an a__hole act.

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KronkLaSworda − Y T A to yourself for not getting the machine. It really does help sleep apnea and other issues. It's a life changer if you can afford it....

Why? Because of your snoring and tossing and turning? This will end that. Why? Because she also has a sleep disorder? Then she should also schedule an appointment for the...

jordb002 − Unless your wife is a doctor, don't take medical advice from her. NTA

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Some comments with many different opinions come from readers.

PlethoraOfDogs − You WOULD be an AH if you DONT make that appt! My sleep study showed that I stopped breathing for almost a minute. I know people who have...

You’re not getting decent sleep so you’re cranky at times and not able to function at your best. Please make that appointment and have the dr explain to your SELFISH...

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BigBigBigTree − NTA dude sleep apnea is really hard on your body! It can affect your brain function and your heart! We need oxygen to live! !!! Reschedule that appointment...

In the end, the husband prioritized his health by securing the CPAP despite spousal pushback and his own harsh words, underscoring sleep apnea’s seriousness against skepticism and minor habits. The silent standoff hints at deeper trust issues around medical decisions in their young family.

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How do couples navigate differing views on healthcare without escalating to ultimatums? What role should postpartum fatigue play in supporting a partner’s diagnosis?

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