AITA for wanting a different engagement ring?

She had imagined her engagement ring for years—down to the metal, the stones, even the vibe. So when her longtime boyfriend finally proposed, it should have been pure joy. Instead, one detail left her feeling unexpectedly crushed.

The ring didn’t match her most recent design, and that small disappointment spiraled into something much bigger. Now she’s wondering whether her sadness over a piece of jewelry says something deeper about the relationship itself. Online, readers had plenty to say—and they didn’t hold back.

AITA for wanting a different engagement ring?

She explained how much thought she had put into her dream ring

I (26f) got engaged to my fiance (25m) last fall. We had been dating for 4 years, and had decided 6 months in we wanted to get married. We love...

I, like many people, have dreamed about my wedding since I was small. Around high school age, I drew out an engagement ring that I thought I'd like.

Basically a silver twig band, with a non-white colorful stone and tiny little stones on the band. Going for an ethereal, elvish vibe cause that's my taste.

When we started dating and decided we loved each other, I showed him my sketch and he was excited because he said that was what he'd have picked for me.

Over time, her tastes evolved—and she kept him updated

As life went on, my tastes changed. Around the 1 year mark of us dating, my ring sketch changed. I now wanted a rose gold hammered band, with 3 purple/pink...

Every 6 months, my boi and I talked about it, went over the changes.* I was so happy with our communication.

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The proposal happened, but something felt off immediately

Then he proposed with a rose gold twig band with a black raw stone. Black. He says it's a blue stone but it looks black in 99% of light. There...

but the ring feels like the straw that has broken my back and I'm questioning if I even want to get married anymore now because my brain is spiraling.

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Attempts to fix it only made things more complicated

I told him I didn't like the ring and he was heartbroken. He said he'd had the ring for 6 months and he liked it, but that if I hated...

We were going to exchange it but the jeweler won't take it back because it was custom made. We've talked about just adding a second, more colorful stone but I...

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Now it's been 6 months and we haven't talked about it because it puts both of us in such bad moods to talk about it.I love him with all of...

Even if we didn't get married I'd stay with him forever. But everytime I look at this ring I just get so freaking sad and I don't know what to...

She clarified her communication, but doubt lingered

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*Edit: I wasn't very clear. I changed my mind, made a new sketch, and every time we talked about getting married/wedding stuff after we looked at it so he knew...

I'll also add he didn't want a sketch from the beginning, he said he should be able to pick out what I'd like if he knew me well enough to...

The excitement of engagement quickly met unexpected disappointment

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Update: Thank you for the constructive criticism. My anxiety can make it hard to tell what in my life is a real mountain, and what is a molehill I've blow...

I realize the ring is a molehill, and want to see it as the symbol it was meant to be. I will also work with my fiance and therapist to...

This situation highlights a classic tension between expectation and meaning. The ring represents years of imagined perfection for her. For him, it likely represents effort, love, and commitment. When those symbols collide, emotions run high.

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Engagements often carry intense pressure. Social media, wedding culture, and lifelong fantasies can create a detailed mental script. When reality misses even one element, disappointment can feel outsized. That doesn’t make her shallow—it makes her human. However, questioning the entire relationship over jewelry signals deeper anxiety at play.

Dr. John Gottman explains that lasting partnerships rely on turning toward each other’s emotional bids. He notes, “Small moments often hold the key to a couple’s future.” In this case, the key moment isn’t the ring—it’s how they respond to each other’s hurt. He felt crushed. She felt unseen. Both reactions matter.

A productive next step would involve reframing the ring as temporary and the marriage as permanent. Rings can be reset, redesigned, upgraded, or replaced on anniversaries. Open conversation with clear reassurance—“I love you, this is about the object, not you”—could ease his heartbreak. At the same time, continuing therapy to manage perfection-driven anxiety may help her separate fantasy from partnership reality. Marriage thrives on flexibility far more than flawless aesthetics.

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See what others had to share with OP:

Many commenters felt she was focusing on the wrong thing

[Reddit User] − YTA, oh my god. You gave the poor man an updated vision every *six months* and expected him to keep track of the changes? He clearly tried...

I’m curious to hear what else was ‘wrong’ with his proposal, because you sound like a mess. Apologize and learn to love what you have.

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And generally I’ll side with the woman if her partner totally ignored what she communicated she wanted. This is. ..not that.

By a long shot. And even though he’s willing to exchange it, you’re still questioning if you want to get married? ? At that point, don’t. He deserves better.

lachuladechihuahua − YTA if a simple ring design has you wondering if you want to marry him, you're not really in love with him. You should be focused on a...

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windyrainyrain − YTA You're not mature enough to get married. You said: *There were so many things that just didn't fit my dream about the whole engagement situation,

but the ring feels like the straw that has broken my back and I'm questioning if I even want to get married anymore now because my brain is spiraling.*

If something like this is enough to make "your brain spiral", how will you handle real, serious, grown up things that happen in a marriage?

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Grow up and come back to the idea of being married when you're more emotionally mature than a 13 year old who has watched too many Disney movies.

String_brass − YTA. That’s some pretty unreasonable expectations. He thoughtfully got you a ring custom made. You crushed him. Obviously a piece of metal is more important to you than...

Black_Tears524 − YTA. I'm going to attempt to not be too harsh here but you're in love with the idea of fairy tale love and a fairy tale wedding and...

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If you were in love with him then a stupid piece of metal wouldn't be making rethink a marriage. Marriage is about a life together not a piece of metal.

Others acknowledged her feelings but urged perspective

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CMBM20 − YTA Your disappointment is fine and normal. I also don’t think that you’re spoiled or a bad person at all. You have hyped this moment in your head...

and that is devastating for you. But to say that it’s so bad that you don’t want to be married to your fiancé is the problem. A marriage isn’t about...

Try to refocus your priorities. With regard to the ring, talk to your fiancé about selling it. If he’s okay with it, then I’m sure you’ll be able to find...

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DelurkingtoComment − Rose gold, twig band… it seems like he was listening and tried his best. YTA.

astraleigh − YTA. It sounds like you’ve got a lotta expectations on your dream engagement/wedding details… but I’m curious, are you making this HIS dream engagement too? Ya gotta think...

jjswin − YTA I’m probably going to be alone on this, but the thought of him putting effort into choosing it, and knowing how much it meant to you, he...

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It’s sad that you can’t wear it knowing that the love of your life chose it for you and that be enough. I would have thought by four years in...

Beneficial-Pizza5911 − Imagine … engagement rings didn’t even exist, and you had to focus on … an actual person, instead. See? That was easy. YTA.

Other comments from readers.

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Somethingisshadysir − Sigh. Kid, have you listened when the people around you have told you you're shallow, or did you let it go in one ear and out the other?...

TheGreyWitchQueen − "I love him with all my heart" I don't think you do. If the colour of a stone in a ring is enough for you to rethink marrying...

[Reddit User] − “I love him with all my heart” and yet, the fact that he compiled a beautiful, custom, ring for you that combined all of your desires over...

With that perspective, I can’t believe you love him. You might love the *idea* of him and of marriage, but if a ring design

(which was super thoughtful and that you can change at any time in the future! ) is making you second guess this relationship then you don’t love him. YTA

[Reddit User] − Are you shitting me? ! Of course YTA! Do you have ANY idea how expensive engagement rings are? !

Not only that, he put so much thought into it and had it custom made. And now you’re debating not marrying him? Marriage should be based on love and happiness,...

[Reddit User] − YTA and even more so if you let this man go. He went out of his way (more than most men I know) to get you the...

and you're thinking of leaving him? ? He deserves someone better. Please do other ladies a favor and throw him back out there for someone who'll appreciate him better.

At the heart of this debate is a simple but powerful question: what matters more—the symbol, or the commitment behind it? Disappointment over a ring is understandable. Letting it overshadow a loving, long-term partnership is where many readers drew the line. In the end, she acknowledged that the ring may be a molehill, not a mountain. Still, the conversation reveals how expectations can quietly grow larger than reality. If you were in her place, would you push for a redesign—or learn to love the meaning behind what was chosen?

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