Man Shows His True Colors After Assuming Fiancée Is Pregnant, Leaving Her “Shocked And Humiliated”
Most conventional relationships have a sort of progression, from casual dating, to a more serious relationship, living together, then, often a proposal of some sort. It’s nice to think that one’s partner is ready for the next step because they are excited to be with you, but sometimes that’s just not the case.
A woman asked the internet if she was wrong for rethinking her engagement and relationship when her fiancé called her out for drinking while pregnant. The catch? She wasn’t pregnant. She later shared a substantial update. We also reached out to her via private message and will update the article when she gets back to us.
Being told you’re pregnant when you’re not must be a confusing feeling
Image credits: EyeEm (not the actual photo)
So one woman ended up questioning her relationship after her fiancé was angry she drank at a party
Image credits: EyeEm (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Other-Suggestion1609
Big relationship decisions need to be made for the right reasons
The transition from “dating” to “engaged” is supposed to be a milestone of mutual intent, but as this viral story illustrates, it can sometimes be a byproduct of a phenomenon social scientists call sliding versus deciding. Research by Dr. Scott Stanley and Dr. Galena Rhoades at the University of Denver suggests that couples who “slide” into major life transitions due to external pressures or perceived obligations, rather than making a deliberate, proactive choice, often face higher rates of marital distress. In this case, the fiancé didn’t propose because he felt the relationship had reached its natural peak of maturity, he proposed because he misinterpreted a bathroom discovery as a “positive test” and felt he had to “step up.” This is a classic example of a relationship foundation built on an external crisis rather than internal compatibility. When a commitment is triggered by a “phantom pregnancy” rather than a shared vision of the future, the stability of that bond is statistically much more fragile.
Beyond the motivation for the proposal, the fiancé’s behavior on New Year’s Eve provides a textbook look at what Dr. John Gottman calls the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, specifically Contempt and Criticism. When he publicly shamed his partner, calling her “reckless” and questioning what kind of mother she would be, he wasn’t just expressing a concern, he was attacking her character. According to Gottman’s decades of research, contempt, the feeling that one partner is superior to the other, is the single greatest predictor of divorce.
By launching a weeks-long “surveillance state” on her diet and then airing his grievances in front of his extended family, the fiancé bypassed the essential component of emotional safety. A healthy partner addresses concerns privately and with empathy, they do not use an audience to enforce their will or “correct” a partner’s behavior through humiliation.
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
If one can’t trust their partner, the relationship is probably in trouble
Furthermore, this story highlights a total breakdown in Perceived Partner Responsiveness (PPR), which is a psychological term for how much we believe our partner understands, values, and supports us. When the woman told her fiancé she wasn’t pregnant and he responded by telling her “not to lie,” he effectively severed the trust bond. Studies on relational trust emphasize that for a partnership to survive, both people must believe the other is an “honest broker” of reality. If a partner prefers their own fabricated narrative over your explicit truth, they are engaging in a form of cognitive distortion that makes collaborative problem-solving impossible. The fact that he spent weeks monitoring her without her knowledge is a major violation of the transparency and honesty required for a marriage.
The intervention of the Mother-in-Law, framing the event as a “little misunderstanding,” introduces the issue of differentiation of self. In family systems theory, differentiation is the ability to maintain your own emotional identity while staying connected to your family. A healthy fiancé would have apologized profusely for his own lack of communication, instead, he seems to be hiding behind his mother’s attempts to smooth things over. When a parent minimizes a significant breach of trust as mere “effort” required for a relationship, they are often encouraging the victim to overlook red flags of controlling behavior. For a 22-year-old woman, the question isn’t just about whether she can forgive a mistake, but whether she wants to be tied to a family system that prioritizes “keeping the peace” over truth and respect.
Evaluating whether this relationship is a “lost cause” requires looking at the fiancé’s capacity for self-reflection. If he continues to insist he was “doing the right thing” despite being objectively wrong and publicly cruel, the prognosis is poor. Studies on conflict resolution in young adults show that the ability to take responsibility for one’s actions is a key indicator of long-term success. If he cannot acknowledge that his secret surveillance and public shaming were abusive and unnecessary, he is likely to repeat these patterns. Loving someone is rarely enough to bridge the gap if there is a fundamental lack of respect for a partner’s autonomy.
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
People suggested they communicated and wondered what actually happened
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
She talked to him and then posted an update
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Other-Suggestion1609
Some folks needed more details
Readers wished her the best, some still suggested that the relationship wouldn’t work out
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OP, aged 22: "But we've been together since I was 19! He's had so much time to show me his true colors!" --- oh, you sweet summer child.
If there ever was a time for, "Oh you sweet Summer Child..." THIS IS IT. **Why was he rooting around in the garbage to begin with? *** This is the only time he's acted like this, [NO this is the FIRST time you've seen it, and there will be plenty more.] *** We've been together since we were 19*** OK, this is where I step back and realize people have to make their own mistakes.
He's very young, so I could possibly see him being naive enough to assume a pregnancy test was his GF's rather than his mother and maybe how drinking is really bad for a baby, but the lack of communication and to publicly embarrass his partner are unforgivable sins, even at his age. As is only proposing to some one because you think they are pregnant. It's not the 1950s.
Hun, please don't move in together. You both need to live independently, either alone, or flatsharing with other people (not together), so you can learn to be independent adults. Living with your parents, a parent-child dynamic continues. You need some living as just yourself, not your parents' daughter, or half of a couple. You have a lot of growing up to do. It's important for him to do so too, as he sounds pretty enmeshed with his mother. He needs to learn to take care of himself, and stop running to her to solve his problems. Living seperately and dating while you learn to adult may feel intimidating, but it is a necessary part of growing up to be an independant person.
OP, aged 22: "But we've been together since I was 19! He's had so much time to show me his true colors!" --- oh, you sweet summer child.
If there ever was a time for, "Oh you sweet Summer Child..." THIS IS IT. **Why was he rooting around in the garbage to begin with? *** This is the only time he's acted like this, [NO this is the FIRST time you've seen it, and there will be plenty more.] *** We've been together since we were 19*** OK, this is where I step back and realize people have to make their own mistakes.
He's very young, so I could possibly see him being naive enough to assume a pregnancy test was his GF's rather than his mother and maybe how drinking is really bad for a baby, but the lack of communication and to publicly embarrass his partner are unforgivable sins, even at his age. As is only proposing to some one because you think they are pregnant. It's not the 1950s.
Hun, please don't move in together. You both need to live independently, either alone, or flatsharing with other people (not together), so you can learn to be independent adults. Living with your parents, a parent-child dynamic continues. You need some living as just yourself, not your parents' daughter, or half of a couple. You have a lot of growing up to do. It's important for him to do so too, as he sounds pretty enmeshed with his mother. He needs to learn to take care of himself, and stop running to her to solve his problems. Living seperately and dating while you learn to adult may feel intimidating, but it is a necessary part of growing up to be an independant person.















































































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