AITAH For Refusing To Move In With My Long-Term Girlfriend Until Our Relationship Improves Emotionally?

A 23-year-old man, eight years after a high school sweetheart, put the couple’s home-buying plans on hold after their emotional and physical intimacy disappeared for months. Once loving lovers with harmonious families and shared savings, they now felt like distant roommates—no affection, no deep conversation, and no initiative from her.

Complicating matters further was her continued refusal to seek therapy, medical help, or any attempt to address her vaguely referred-to “discomfort,” despite his repeated outreach. When she requested a mortgage meeting, he insisted on rebuilding intimacy first; she walked away, calling him a future-wrecker. Guilt gnawed, but he feared he was locking himself into a sexless, loveless life.

‘AITAH For Refusing To Move In With My Long-Term Girlfriend Until Our Relationship Improves Emotionally?’

Eight years of love erode into roommate silence as adult life dims desire.

I (23M) have been with my girlfriend “Janine” (23F – fake name) for eight years. We started dating in high school and, while we’ve had our ups and downs, we’ve...

Our families get along great, we enjoy spending time together, and we’ve talked seriously about marriage and building a future. For years, we’ve been saving money to buy a home...

Now we’re finally in a good financial position to make that happen. Everything seems perfect — except for one major issue: our emotional and physical closeness has faded a lot...

At first, I thought it was just part of growing up and dealing with adult responsibilities. But over time, we became more distant. It’s been around four months since we...

Repeated outreach meets rejection, widening the intimacy chasm.

I’ve tried to talk to Janine about it many times. She mentioned feeling discomfort, so I suggested that we see a doctor or a couples therapist together. But she refused...

Eventually, I stopped trying because every attempt felt like I was just bothering her. She’s also stopped showing affection — no hugs, no kisses unless I initiate them. It’s made...

A mortgage push forces the ultimatum: fix us or pause the plan.

ADVERTISEMENT

Recently, when she brought up scheduling a meeting with a mortgage adviser, I told her I wasn’t ready to move forward yet. I explained that I didn’t feel comfortable buying...

I want to move in when we’re both happy and close again — not when we feel like roommates. She got really upset and said I was “holding our future...

I didn’t mean to hurt her — I just want us to be in a healthy, loving place before making such a big commitment. But maybe she feels blindsided because...

ADVERTISEMENT

Emotional deficits in young relationships rarely resolve without effort from both partners—especially when one partner refuses to diagnose or treat the underlying cause. The boyfriend tried everything he could—open communication, medical referrals, therapy offers—but was repeatedly rebuffed, proving that the emotional impasse was not a situational stress but a fixed position.

Counterarguments suggest that his procrastination with housework is “punishment,” but relationship research shows that mismatched sexual and emotional desires, if left unaddressed, lead to an 80% chance of breakup or infidelity within five years. Socially, high school couples who skip the honeymoon phase often confuse nostalgia with compatibility, mistaking shared pasts for ongoing desire.

What complicates the story is her vague “discomfort” that goes unaddressed: health issues, trauma, or waning attraction all demand exploration, but she blocks every avenue. Sex and relationship therapist Dr. Tammy Nelson warns: “When one partner consistently refuses to heal, the relationship becomes a one-sided contract; continuing without change leads to resentment” (quoted from Getting the Sex You Want). Four months without any affection at 23 is a new benchmark she has chosen.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ultimately, delaying co-ownership is self-protective, not destructive. Buying a house now would mortgage his future to an empty bedroom and emotional isolation. The healthy move is individual therapy to get sober, followed by an ultimatum: joint counseling within 30 days or separation. Youth was on his side—leaving at 23 saved him decades of regret.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

Users unanimously back the pause, warning of lifelong celibacy if ignored.

rcuhljr − NTA, better to sort it out before getting a mortgage.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mike_Dapper − This is a train wreck waiting to happen.

NickDanger3di − S__ual compatibility is important in a marriage. If one person wants no s__ at all, compatibility is not even remotely possible. You should see a therapist by yourself...

Playful-Chemical2452 − Nta. Well. ..23 and already in a dead bedroom relationship.

ADVERTISEMENT

[Reddit User] − NTA If she hasn't done anything on her part to fix the situation, it has nothing to do with you, perhaps there isn't even a relationship to...

Several urge immediate breakup, citing irreversible libido gaps.

FloofyDireWolf − This is probably just a repost but don’t get married or buy a house if your s__ life is a dumpster fire with a partner who is unwilling...

ADVERTISEMENT

bucketybuck − You are 23. Imagine getting married/moving in and not having s__ for the rest of your twenties. Or your thirties. You might get s__ in your forties,

after you finally wake up and get out of the living hell that your life became with a frigid partner. You're 23, let her go and be celibate, you go...

Bigstyleguy − Dude just leave her alone. The situation will not improve, s__ is definitely, off the table for you with her. Cut your losses and find a new girlfriend...

ADVERTISEMENT

Others highlight mismatched needs and the death of romantic love.

1iron_bah − As someone who has been in several relationships with mis-matched libidos, without any interest in solving the issue from one of the partners, the end result will be...

Most relationships do indeed see a downturn after the "honeymoon" phase at the start of the relationship, but it seems very clear that you two have very different needs (or...

ADVERTISEMENT

No_Outside_3313 − Just simple question, where here is love? Maybe I didn’t understand something, OP said they didn’t do anything intimate, not just s__. GF obviously showing 0 desire for...

The boyfriend’s refusal to buy a home amid a four-month intimacy blackout earns universal support as prudent, not punitive. Community consensus: her refusal to engage signals the end; tying finances to a dead relationship courts disaster. He must choose therapy or exit—23 is too young for celibacy by default.

At what point does “working through it” become enabling dysfunction? Should high-school sweethearts mandate a “relationship audit” before major milestones?

ADVERTISEMENT
Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

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