AITAH: For telling my fiancée to not share a letter my ex-wife sent to me on social media?
A desperate email from an ex-wife begging her ex-husband not to marry his fiancée has sparked a heated debate about privacy and public shaming. The letter—filled with delusions, pleading, and borderline personality disorder (BPD)-fueled remorse—crossed all boundaries, but the fiancée’s desire to post it on Instagram clashed with the groom’s plea for respect. What started as a close post-divorce friendship has become an obsession, now threatening marital bliss.
The stakes are high: shared social circles, mutual friends, and a mentally ill ex-wife who promised “in sickness and in health.” As they cut off contact, the couple debate whether revealing the truth will heal or humiliate them—especially when pity can be directed toward the wrong person.

‘AITAH: For telling my fiancée to not share a letter my ex-wife sent to me on social media?’
A decade-long love story ended in mutual understanding—until mental health unraveled the peace.




Post-divorce friendship lingered too long, feeding attachment amid Lily’s spiraling depression and BPD diagnosis.





Engagement joy triggered Lily’s meltdown email—now Mila demands public crucifixion while the groom begs restraint.









Publicly shaming a mentally ill ex through private correspondence risks backfiring – making the fiancée appear cruel while gaining sympathy for Lily. The groom’s refusal to share personal information sets boundaries; the exposure becomes unnecessarily severe. Some see Mila’s impulse as a legitimate excuse, but adults prefer silence. The concomitant complications of BPD require empathy without contact.
Moreover, friendships that persist after divorce create the conditions for delusion. What complicates matters is the increasingly tight social ties – public posts can alienate those who share them. As a lawyer, reputational damage goes both ways.
According to psychologist Dr. Ramani Durvasula, “Posting private mental health crises on social media weaponizes vulnerability; true safety comes from boundaries, not gossip.”
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
Most users sided with the groom, warning that exposure would crown Mila the villain while martyring Lily.







A few offered strategic alternatives—Mila’s fear is valid, but nuclear options fail.







Light jabs mocked the drama while reinforcing privacy.










One unhinged email doesn’t justify a public execution—especially when mental illness muddies motive. The groom’s NC line holds firm; Mila’s social media nuke risks blowback that crowns her the bully.
Should exes with BPD get public grace or private exile? Would you preempt wedding crashers with security—or trust silence to starve drama?
