AITA for telling my husbands friend that he was selfish and hurting his wife?

During a casual group gathering to meet a newborn, the conversation turned to future kids. One man—popular, athletic, and engaged—announced he and his fiancée would marry only after having children, overriding her chance to speak. His fiancée, a kind and gentle woman recently hit by grief (lost her father) and a serious chronic illness causing headaches, fainting, dizziness, and extreme fatigue, looked visibly sad. As an immigrant far from family support, she’s increasingly dependent on him.

The poster, fresh from her own difficult pregnancy without nearby family, spoke up: the plan seemed risky for her health and selfish, prioritizing his wants over hers—bordering on abuse. The room went silent, and the couple left. Her husband later agreed privately but said it wasn’t her place. Friends were split: some praised her courage, others thought it was too harsh or intrusive. The update reveals the fiancée is now questioning the timeline and seeking medical advice—plus a big fight where he blamed her for not defending “their” position.

‘AITA for telling my husbands friend that he was selfish and hurting his wife?’

The incident unfolded in a group setting:

My (32F) husband (36M), has a high school friend (36M). Let’s call him John. John is a typical jock. Athletic, good looking, popular with girls. But I’ve been around enough...

To the story: we were in a group of friends, and I was introducing them to my new baby (0F). Important info: I had a miserable pregnancy. The topic of...

More important information: his fiancee, Janet, is an amazing lady. Kind, smart, gentle. Recently, she has been through a lot: lost her dad and her health has been terrible.

Not going to say what, but she has a disease that causes headaches, weakness, dizzy spells, fainting, extreme fatigue. She has become more and more emotionally and physically dependent on...

On top of that she (and I) come from another country. It means her family and support system are not here.

The conversation escalated:

Back to the situation: I asked her if they planned to have kids after the wedding, that is in 2 years. I thought that because it gives her time to...

I am surprised for two reasons: she always said she wanted kids after marriage and her health is not good. She doesn’t say anything, but looks sad.

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The poster pushed back:

I argue that it doesn’t seem like a good plan, and that a pregnancy now could put her health at risk. He said her “fertility window is almost closing” and...

I ended up saying he is selfish and this decision is only based on his wants and needs and is hurting her. Basically a form of abuse. The room gets...

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My husband later agreed with me, but said it was not my place to say anything. Our friends are mixed, saying someone had to say it, but that I was...

I feel maybe was not my place and I was being a busybody, but after being through a hard pregnancy myself m, without my family, I know how hard it...

And my husband is a great supportive guy. Meanwhile John leaves her alone all the time to party and enjoy life. He is dooming someone that trusts him blindly into...

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Update: Thank you for all the answers. I am blown away by all the perspectives and was able to see further into the situation. I reached out to Janet and...

I started by apologising. I said I should not have said all this things in front of everyone and acted as if she cannot speak for herself.

She said she was initially embarrassed, but after further thought she started questioning if it was really a good idea to have kids now and has scheduled a talk with...

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She said John doesn’t know, and she wants to have more information before talking to him. She also said he was furious afterwards and they had a terrible fight. So...

and he did blame her, saying she should have defended their position and that she knew having kids was a must for him. He also said that a woman would...

She asked him what if she could not, and apparently he never answered. It seems more has happened in the fight, but I decided not to pressure her and let...

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Lastly, she decided to take some time off and go home to her mom, and I think it is a great idea. The saddest for me was that she cried...

That it was like she found a golden ticket. I held my tongue, because I personally do not think he is a prize. But again I took the advice and...

I also had a long talk with my husband, and we are at odds. He still thinks I am overreacting and that Jonh poops gold. I am frustrated, but not...

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Reproductive coercion—pressuring or forcing decisions about pregnancy, often disregarding a partner’s health or wishes—is a recognized form of abuse. Here, overriding Janet’s input, dismissing her serious illness, and tying marriage to childbearing (“fertility window closing”) ignores her autonomy and risks her safety. Chronic conditions with fainting and fatigue make pregnancy especially dangerous, and isolation from family amplifies vulnerability.

From the fiancé’s side, he may genuinely fear delayed fertility or see kids as a relationship milestone, but centering his timeline over her well-being is coercive. Public confrontation can feel invasive, but when someone appears unable to speak (sad, silent, dependent), speaking up can plant seeds of doubt—especially if private talks haven’t happened.

Experts (e.g., from domestic violence organizations like the National Network to End Domestic Violence) advise: intervene safely, prioritize the vulnerable person’s agency, and offer private support rather than public debate. The poster’s follow-up coffee was ideal—apologizing for the setting while validating her concerns helped Janet seek medical advice and space. Husbands/friends should challenge harmful views privately to avoid enabling. Ultimately, supporting autonomy isn’t meddling—it’s protecting someone who may not feel safe advocating alone.

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Here’s how people reacted to the post:

The community was mostly supportive (NTA), viewing the comment as a necessary call-out against potential reproductive abuse and misogyny, especially given Janet’s vulnerability. A minority called ESH for the public nature or assumptions. Opinions grouped into streams:

Strong NTA: It was brave to name the selfishness/abuse; someone had to speak up for her:

brogangles1 − What you said was the truth, but you were a little harsh. I think you were right to say it because the guy obviously doesn't care how he...

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Fromasha − This is a tough one but you're NTA here. You were looking out for someone who is vulnerable ... and you know her fiance is an AH.

You were trying to do her a favour but will get s__t for it because it was stepping over the line and messing in someone else's relationship. It sounds like...

Small-Help-8382 − NTA- calling abuse by its name makes everyone a little uncomfortable but John needed to hear it.

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Silaquix − NTA reproductive abuse is a thing and unfortunately it's rarely called out. He's straight up saying he doesn't give a s__t about her health or desires and just...

It's always uncomfortable to be the one to speak up ... But it's better that she hears it and realizes she's not crazy if this is something she doesn't want.

bakeacake45 − You stood up to a misogynistic bully to help save the life of a woman…you are a damn hero in my book.

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Fine-Bit-7537 − NTA. You had the guts to call someone out for being cruel, even if it wasn’t polite.

dystopianpirate − NTA People wonder why there's so much injustice and cruelty in the world, and is bec we ... always keep quiet ... You did well, and your husband...

kenishaj − I am glad she has someone to stand up for her because her husband is an AH. She deserves better

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Specialist-Object253 − NTA. I'm glad you stood up for her. ... If you lose friends because of this, GOOD. Those people don't belong in your life.

Mixed/ESH: Right intent, wrong delivery (public, assumptions about her feelings):

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Anonymians − ESH (except his wife) In this conversation/fight both you and John are treating his wife as if she’s a child that can’t make decisions for herself. He is...

[Reddit User] − Honestly, I would be pissed if someone started talking and arguing about MY health issues in public. ... You didn’t speak to her, but made assumptions. ......

belmontbluebird − Maybe you could have pulled him aside and spoke to him alone, but I wouldn't say you're the a__hole. ... Either way, you're NTA, just a bit blunt.

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Strong defense of the action: Health trumps everything; truth hurts but helps:

Extreme_Mixture_8702 − NTA. Maybe public shaming will help him think about his wife’s wellbeing.

chasingcars67 − Health wins over feelings every time. ... Truth make some people uncomfortable, let them be uncomfortable. I would’ve given a standing ovation if you did this in front...

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Snoob71 − NTA, it's easy for us guys to say when we want kids, but the woman has all the work of carrying the child. ... You were just stating...

Speaking up against a potentially harmful plan—especially when someone seems unable to advocate—can be courageous, even if the delivery feels harsh. Reproductive decisions should center the person carrying the pregnancy, not timelines or ultimatums. The update shows real impact: Janet is now seeking expert advice and space, proving the words resonated despite the fallout.

When is it okay to intervene in a friend’s relationship? Have you ever called out concerning behavior in your circle? Drop your thoughts or similar stories below—your perspective could help others navigate these delicate moments.

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