Pregnant Wife Catches Husband Secretly Smoking Indoors, Then He Tries to Turn the Blame on Her

We all know that moment when a lingering scent betrays a secret someone tried desperately to hide. For one pregnant mother, waking up to the unmistakable stench of cigarette smoke in her own home unraveled a frustrating web of hidden habits and defensive deflections.

She thought her husband had committed to a smoke-free life, especially considering his ongoing battle with multiple sclerosis and the fact that they were expecting their second child. But finding him puffing away in the back bedroom was only the tip of the iceberg. Instead of an apology, she was met with a barrage of old resentments and bizarre justifications that left her questioning her own sanity. Curious how it all unfolded? The full story is right below.

Pregnant Wife Catches Husband Secretly Smoking Indoors, Then He Tries to Turn the Blame on Her

I [33F] found my husband [33M] smoking in the house and the conflict escalated badly. Am I being OTT?

The quiet sanctuary of a sleeping home is instantly shattered by the sharp, undeniable reality of a broken promise.

I woke up in the night last night to smell cigarettes in the house. None of us are smokers, and I was shocked to find my husband had been smoking...

I am currently pregnant with baby number two, and it has been well established since my husband's last blip that we don't smoke in the house (as he did have...

The devastating irony of choosing a habit that directly accelerates his own physical decline adds a heavy layer of tragedy to the betrayal.

Also, my husband has multiple sclerosis, and smoking can increase his chance of relapse and worsen his disease progression. Since his diagnosis three years ago, he said he would never...

I also swore off smoking well before I got pregnant and feel very strongly about not having cigarette smoke around our children due to health risks. My husband feels I...

So, he feels the smell and therefore risk of toxins/secondhand smoke being inhaled by others is low (no regard for his own health). He doesn't see that hiding this from...

When I confronted him, he then began to bring up events from our past where I had lied to him, which I felt was irrelevant and unfair to do in...

Deflection transforms a simple broken rule into a psychological battlefield, leaving the original issue buried under years of unrelated grievances.

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This isn’t the first time he has lied/omitted telling me things he knew I'd be upset about. When I have found omissions out and confronted him, I've noticed a pattern...

I don't think this is fair, and I also don't think it's fair that he says things like, "Well, my friends do this and their wives don't care, so why...

" These phrases have come out a lot over the years, and I have recently been in therapy. This has helped me have a different perspective on these conversations, and...

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He has made it clear couples counselling is not an option for us, and he tried solo therapy recently too, but he didn't feel this was beneficial and he felt...

I want to make things work between us (he says he does too), as like any relationship it has its ups and downs, but at the end of the day...

Also, I am open to consider I may be blowing this up into something too big. I would like any and all perspectives, please.

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TLDR: Husband's behaviour around conflict is the real issue. How can we proceed in our relationship when accountability is being avoided?

The poster is dealing with more than a single incident of smoking—it’s a pattern of secrecy, deflection, and mismatched expectations. She’s pregnant, they have a young child, and they’d previously agreed on no smoking, especially indoors. Finding him smoking in the house feels like a breach of trust and safety, not just a bad habit. The conflict escalates because it taps into a deeper issue: repeated avoidance of accountability.

From his side, the situation may look different. He could be struggling with addiction, stress, or even denial about the risks—especially with his MS diagnosis. His argument that “you didn’t notice before” suggests he’s minimizing harm to justify behavior he knows conflicts with shared agreements. Bringing up her past mistakes is a classic defensive move—redirecting blame to avoid feeling judged or controlled.

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This dynamic touches on broader relationship themes: how couples handle conflict, take responsibility, and maintain trust. According to John Gottman, “Defensiveness is really a way of blaming your partner… it escalates conflict rather than resolving it.” When one partner consistently deflects and the other feels unheard, resentment builds faster than the original issue itself.

Practically, the path forward isn’t about “winning” this argument. Start by separating issues: (1) smoking in the house and (2) how you two argue. For the first, set a clear, non-negotiable boundary around indoor smoking tied to health, not control. For the second, try structured conversations: use “I feel” statements, call out deflection calmly (“we can talk about my past later, but right now I need us to stay here”), and agree on basic conflict rules. If he refuses therapy, consider alternatives like books, guided conversations, or even a one-time mediated session. If nothing changes, the real question becomes how long you’re willing to carry a pattern that leaves you feeling dismissed.

Community Opinions

Reddit came in hot—nearly unanimous in their outrage, with several commenters pointing out the severe health risks and manipulative tactics at play.

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he feels the smell and therefore risk of toxins/secondhand smoke being inhaled by others is low He is wrong. For the children's sake, I'd tell him he may not smoke...

u/Prestigious-Ad1346 He's not going to stop smoking, that's for sure. You need to accept that, but smoking INSIDE the house is diabolical and absolutely disgusting behavior. Strike a deal with...

u/positiveLoving18 Hellllll no!! In the house???? Like what. He can at the very least go outside. He needs a different therapist if anything. Or a doctor to tell him how...

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u/qtqy My dad was a smoker. When I was a small child a doctor reamed him out completely for smoking in the house and especially smoking around children. He was...

u/Physical_Complex_891 Your husband is wrong. Smoking inside deposits third hand smoke on every inch of your home. It increases the risk of SIDS once baby is born and its a...

u/JadeHarley0 Your husband is being doubly a jerk. 1) he is being an ignoramus. He should know that science is clear that smoking in the house is harmful to children's...

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u/Moemoe5 You cannot stop a smoker from smoking. Threats will not make him stop. Now. He should never be smoking in the house or around the children. If his health...

u/the_greengrace I see this here so often. It's frustrating. I can't imagine how frustrating it is for you. You are here asking us how to make your husband change. We...

u/curlyq9702 As a former smoker (I smoked almost as long as you & him have been alive) I know for a Fact that smoking indoors permeates the walls, linens, paint,...

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u/Tall-Ear-3406 Lying about smoking is akin to lying about an affair to me. I would not knowingly date or marry a smoker. So yeah, it’s a big deal and you...

u/Mkheir01 He’s digging up the past to justify what he’s doing today? By that logic, neither one of you can ever be held accountable for anything.

u/Hungry_Advance_8074 The cigarette is one issue, but the pattern is the bigger one. Hiding things, minimizing them, then flipping the blame back onto you will exhaust any relationship over time....

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u/Severina_Glass_208 I just don’t know how knowing all this and i mean voluntary and involuntary on his side, you chose to have another child.

u/Fortheloveofbrains Work on your reactions. If you can calmly state your issues and redirect him if he tries to distract from the issue at hand, he’ll not have a leg...

u/HugeHairyButts If he’s smoking in the house then he’s not even trying to hide it from you.

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A few commenters reminded everyone that an addiction is a powerful force, even though it doesn’t excuse the deceit.

Managing addiction and relationship boundaries under one roof is rarely a smooth process. The tension between maintaining personal health standards and navigating a partner’s defensive deflections creates an undeniable strain on trust. Do you think the husband’s reaction stems purely from the grip of his addiction, or did his refusal to take accountability signal a deeper lack of respect for his family’s well-being? And how would you handle a partner who constantly brings up the past to avoid the present? Drop your thoughts in the comments.

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