He Invited His Ex wife For His Baby Shower To Parade Her As A Failure, But She Came With Quadruplets
…
By year three of their marriage, Austin had stopped pretending to be patient.
He’d make jokes about her biological clock in front of their friends.
He started talking about her fertility struggles to people without her permission, painting himself as the long-suffering husband dealing with a defective wife.
She became the problem he had to solve, the burden he carried.
Then one night in November 2023, everything changed.
She was in their bedroom injecting herself with another round of fertility hormones when Austin walked in and just stood there watching her.
His face held this look she’d never seen before.
Not frustration or disappointment, but something closer to disgust.
“You know what, Amanda?” he said, sitting on the edge of their bed.
“I think we need to talk about other options.
” She thought he meant adoption or maybe surrogacy.
She was so desperate to save their marriage that she was ready to agree to anything.
I’ve been thinking, he continued, maybe we should take a break from all this trying.
Maybe we should take a break from each other.
The hormone injection fell from her hand onto the floor.
The words, “Take a break from each other,” hit her like she’d been slapped.
She stared at Austin, waiting for him to explain what he meant, hoping desperately that she’d misunderstood.
“What are you saying?” she whispered, still kneeling on their bedroom floor next to the dropped syringe.
Austin ran his hands through his hair.
That gesture he did when he was stressed about work.
Except this time, the stress was her.
I’m saying maybe we rushed into this whole baby thing.
Maybe we need to figure out if we’re even compatible long term before we bring a child into this mess.
This mess.
3 years of marriage and suddenly they were a mess.
Austin, we’ve been together for 5 years.
We’re married.
How much more compatible do we need to be? He stood up and started pacing, avoiding her eyes.
That’s just it, Amanda.
I feel like all we do anymore is focus on getting pregnant.
When’s the last time we just enjoyed each other? When’s the last time we had fun? She wanted to remind him that he was the one who’d turned their relationship into a fertility clinic.
He was the one tracking her cycles, scheduling their intimacy, making doctor appointments.
But something in his tone told her this conversation was heading somewhere she wasn’t prepared for.
“We can have fun again,” she said, standing up.
“We can take a vacation, go back to date nights, do whatever you want, but taking a break from each other.
” “Austin, that sounds like you want to separate.
” “Maybe I do.
” The room went completely silent, except for the sound of her heartbreaking.
She’d known things were strained, but she thought they were working through it together.
She thought the fertility struggle was something happening to them, not something he blamed her for.
“Is this about the pregnancy?” she asked.
“Because the doctors said there’s still hope.
We could try IVF.
” Or, “Amanda, stop.
” Austin finally looked at her, and what she saw in his eyes was worse than anger.
It was pity.
This isn’t just about getting pregnant anymore.