My Husband Told Me to Quit My Job When I Got Pregnant – Soon After, He Demanded ‘Separate Budgets,’ So I Taught Him a Lesson He Won’t Forget

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When Selene quits her job to raise their son, she trusts her husband to keep his promise of looking after them. But as the cracks in their picture-perfect life deepen, a single cruel sentence shatters her silence. Now, Selene must decide what she’s willing to lose — and what she’ll fight to reclaim.

From the outside, it looked like we had it all.

The cozy two-bedroom apartment in a new development, where the grass was always clipped, the flowerbed always blooming, and the neighbors always smiling.

The shiny SUV Greg washed every Sunday morning, shirtless, whistling, pretending not to see the way people watched him.

The matching family hoodies. The beach trip reels. The over-filtered Instagram posts that made everyone comment, “Couple goals!

But the thing about perfect pictures?

They don’t have sound.

You don’t hear the silence between us at dinner. You don’t hear the way he exhales when I ask about the grocery budget. You don’t hear the word “providing” used like a leash.

Behind closed doors, it wasn’t romantic.

It was something else entirely.

Greg worked as a sales rep for a medical supply company.

It was one of those jobs with a company car, expense accounts, and a title vague enough to sound impressive at parties.

He wasn’t always full of himself — not when we met, and not when we first got married. But slowly, the job started to change him. Or maybe it just gave him permission to show who he’d always been.

When I got pregnant, he stood in the kitchen one night, his tie undone, his hand resting lightly on my stomach, and smiled sweetly.

“Selene, quit your job,” he said suddenly.

“There’s no point in you working when I can take care of us. My income will be more than enough for the three of us.”

I hesitated. I loved my work. But I loved the idea of being safe at home with my baby even more.

“Are you sure, Greg?” I asked.

Seriously? We’ll be able to manage financially?”

“Of course I’m sure, honey,” he said, smiling. “And you’ll be able to focus on the baby.

No stress. No deadlines… just focus on the three of us.”

So I handed in my resignation, packed up my office, and said goodbye to a job I’d spent years building — because I trusted that he meant what he promised.

I was 35, pregnant for the first time, and too in love with the dream to question it.

It felt like security. It felt like trust — like I could blindly trust my husband to make sure that we’d be okay.

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