Bride Postpones Wedding After Discovering Her Fiancé’s Secret ‘Stress Relief’ Habit
We all know that moment when relationship stress feels entirely overwhelming. For one 36-year-old bride, the tension at home wasn’t just pre-wedding jitters—it was the symptom of a deeply hidden, shocking betrayal. She thought she was simply supporting a burnt-out partner struggling with a failing startup. She was wrong.
Instead of leaning on his future wife during a tough time, her fiancé decided to outsource his coping mechanisms in the most unimaginable way possible, visiting massage parlors for ‘happy endings’ and keeping both his financial ruin and his infidelity a complete secret.
Now, with the wedding postponed and trust completely shattered, she is left questioning whether a man who compartmentalizes his lies so easily can ever be trusted again. Curious how it all unfolded? The full story is right below.

![I [36F] just found out last week from my fiancé [35M] that he visited two different massage parlors with happy endings x3.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/art-title-410683.webp)
The confession came seemingly out of nowhere, shattering the foundation of a two-year relationship just as they were preparing to walk down the aisle.

He weaponized her own supportive nature against her, framing his profound deception as a misguided attempt to protect her from financial anxiety.








The fiancé’s defense—that his visits were purely transactional stress-relief—is a classic example of what psychologists call escapist compartmentalization. By separating physical gratification from emotional intimacy, he attempted to rationalize his actions. However, this situation involves a toxic ‘double betrayal.’ According to research by Dr. Hristina Nikolova at Northeastern University, couples dealing with financial infidelity often face steeper declines in relationship satisfaction than those dealing with romantic infidelity alone. The fiancé didn’t just cheat; he actively hid the collapse of his business while allowing OP to plan a wedding and search for homes they couldn’t afford.
Furthermore, therapist Susan Zola notes that both forms of deceit often stem from identical impulse-control issues and serve as maladaptive coping mechanisms. Instead of facing reality, he outsourced his anxiety. For OP, the focus shouldn’t just be on the massage parlor, but on this deep-seated pattern of evasion. Before even considering couples counseling, OP must demand a full, verified disclosure of his finances to establish a baseline of truth.
Community Opinions
Reddit came in hot—nearly unanimous in their disgust, with many urging the bride to focus on the massive financial red flags he tried to bury.















A few commenters pointedly reminded her that true partners don't use stress as a free pass to completely abandon their vows.
This story forces us to look hard at how people handle immense pressure and whether a broken foundation can ever truly be repaired. Once the veil of trust is pierced by multiple layers of deception, finding a way back seems nearly impossible.
Do you think his confession was a genuine cry for help, or did he just trickle-truth her to ease his own guilt? And if you were standing in her shoes, would you cancel the wedding entirely or attempt to salvage the relationship? Drop your thoughts in the comments.
