Man Leaves His Pregnant Wife, Makes Big Mistake – Story of the Day

A man left his pregnant wife because he didn’t want to “waste his life” looking after a child. But life taught him a vital lesson, and he quickly came to regret his actions.

Brandon and Mary were head over heels in love and got married soon after graduating from college. For the first few years of their marriage, everything seemed to be working perfectly.

Brandon was an adoring husband, and he would never say no to Mary for anything. Soon, Mary announced she was pregnant, and Brandon’s happiness knew no bounds. However, with time, he began to overthink things.

His colleagues would joke that he should bid goodbye to his life since he would have to look after the baby constantly and give up everything. But they wouldn’t just stop there.

Brandon began overthinking and stressing about his wife's pregnancy. | Photo: Shutterstock

Brandon began overthinking and stressing about his wife’s pregnancy. | Photo: Shutterstock

They would take special care to note how their wives looked terrible after having babies. Sentences like “My wife got so big” and “I have a giant elephant waiting for me at home” would be a common part of their conversation.

All these discussions played the same role in Brandon’s overthinking as gasoline does in a fire, and Brandon started thinking that looking after a child would mean sacrificing everything and wasting his life. So one day, he returned early from work and went straight to Mary to convince her to terminate the pregnancy.

“I don’t want to have this child, Mary,” he said as he approached her.

Mary was stunned. “Honey, what’s wrong? Did someone say anything to you?”

Brandon began convincing Mary to terminate the pregnancy. | Photo: Pexels

Brandon began convincing Mary to terminate the pregnancy. | Photo: Pexels

“Nothing like that, Mary,” he said after pausing for a while. “I don’t think I’m ready to become a dad yet.”

Mary started laughing. “Oh God, Brandon. It’s okay. New parents are often anxious about whether they’ll be able to look after their children properly. You know what they say, right? You are never ready to become parents. When you finally have the little one is when you realize what being a parent feels.”

“No, Mary, I’m serious,” Brandon responded firmly. “I don’t want this child.”

Mary held Brandon’s hand and calmly said, “Honey, you’re stressed right now. Let’s talk about it some other day, okay?”

But Brandon jerked his hand out of Mary’s and began yelling. “Can’t you understand what I said? I DON’T WANT TO BECOME A DAD!”

Brandon lashed out at Mary | Photo: Pexels

Brandon lashed out at Mary | Photo: Pexels

At this point, even Mary lost her cool. “Brandon, stop acting like a kid. You were so happy when I told you about the pregnancy. What happened suddenly? Is it one of your stupid friends advising you that you shouldn’t have this child?”

“It doesn’t matter who’s telling me what. I don’t want to waste my life and change diapers. I want to enjoy my life while I’m young, so we are not having this baby,” Brandon said sternly.

“Brandon, I’m repeating myself,” Mary said in a firm tone. “Please calm down, for God’s sake. I won’t let you make a stupid decision just because of what your friends think, okay?”

“Who the hell do you think you are to decide what I should be doing?” Brandon said furiously. “Keep the child if you want it, but I’m not going to waste my life with that jerk!”

Brandon refused to take responsibility for the child. | Photo: Pexels

Brandon refused to take responsibility for the child. | Photo: Pexels

Mary took a step forward and slapped Brandon right in his face. “Don’t you dare utter a word about my child!” she said angrily.

“Fine. Keep that child. But I’m leaving you right now!” Brandon yelled. And within the next ten minutes, he packed all his belongings and left the house.

Mary couldn’t believe what had happened just now. A few days back, Brandon was so excited about becoming a dad, and then there was today when he said out loud that he didn’t want to have the child. She was devastated, to say the least. Nevertheless, she decided to keep the baby and raise it by herself.

Mary was devastated when Brandon left her. | Photo: Pexels

Mary was devastated when Brandon left her. | Photo: Pexels

Years went by. Mary was now living happily with her eight-year-old son. Brandon’s life, on the other hand, just became more miserable.

His coworkers frequently went on vacations with their families and spent weekends with their children, but Brandon was all alone. His recent girlfriend had dumped him for another man, and frankly, Brandon didn’t feel like dating anyone.

He wanted to get back with Mary. He wanted to enjoy family life. He had even tried to contact her several times, but Mary didn’t return his calls or texts.

However, one day, their paths crossed again … only to make Brandon realize how wrong he was to leave his pregnant wife.

Mary was living happily with her son. | Photo: Pexels

Mary was living happily with her son. | Photo: Pexels

It was a Friday evening. Brandon was sitting in the park watching other kids play and thinking about his child, who would have grown up like them too. Suddenly, he heard a voice from behind. When he turned back to see who it was, he spotted a boy standing there holding a short stick.

“Would you mind getting my paper plane for me?” he asked Brandon. “It’s stuck on the tree, and I can’t reach it.”

Brandon gave him a pleasant smile and quickly removed the plane from the tree and gave it to him.

The boy gave Brandon a pleasant smile and thanked him for the help. | Photo: Pexels

The boy gave Brandon a pleasant smile and thanked him for the help. | Photo: Pexels

“Thank you,” the boy replied with a friendly grin.

“It’s okay. Have fun,” Brandon said, moving his hands over the boy’s silk hair.

The boy then ran over to a lady. “Mom, see, I got my plane back,” he told her.

“That’s really brave of you, Aaron,” the lady replied. “Come, let’s go home now.”

Brandon kept looking at Mary and Aaron as they walked away. | Photo: Pexels

Brandon kept looking at Mary and Aaron as they walked away. | Photo: Pexels

When Brandon looked closely at her, he couldn’t believe his eyes. The woman … she was none other than Mary. She looked as beautiful as before, or maybe more attractive, Brandon thought to himself.

He kept looking at them; they seemed really happy together. For one moment, he felt like running over to them and hugging them, but before he could decide what to do, Mary grabbed Aaron’s hand and walked away.

Aaron turned to look at Brandon while leaving and waved goodbye. But Brandon just stood there with tears streaming down his face, thinking how unlucky he was to abandon such a lovely family.

What can we learn from this story?

  • Overthinking can lead to disaster. Brandon began overthinking and urged Mary to terminate the pregnancy after hearing from his colleagues about how their lives had become horrible once their spouses became pregnant.
  • Nobody can beat a mother’s love for her child. When Brandon abandoned Mary, she was heartbroken. However, she chose to keep the child and raise him on her own.

Share this story with your friends. It might inspire people to share their own stories or to help someone else.

If you enjoyed this story, you might like this one about a man who fat shames his wife but regrets his actions when karma strikes back.

Just a Month After Mom’s Death, Dad Brought a Young Mistress Into Our Home for Christmas – I Was Shocked When I Saw Her

Just a month after my mother lost her battle with cancer, Dad brought his mistress home for Christmas and introduced her as my “NEW MOM.” My heart shattered, but it wasn’t the only thing that left me shaken.

My hands won’t stop trembling as I write this. I need to share about a Christmas dinner that turned into a nightmare and showed me how quickly a family can shatter. There are some moments you wish you could forget, but they end up teaching you the hardest lessons about life, grief, and what it means to move on.

An upset woman | Source: Pexels

An upset woman | Source: Pexels

It’s been exactly one month since we buried Mom. For three years she fought cancer, and even at the end, she never stopped being… Mom. I remember her last day so clearly — the beeping machines, the afternoon sunlight streaming through the hospital window, and how she squeezed my hand with surprising strength.

“Lily, sweetheart,” she whispered, her voice raspy but determined. “Promise me something?”

“Anything, Mom.” I was trying so hard not to cry.

“Take care of your sisters. And your father… he doesn’t do well alone. Never has.” She smiled that soft smile of hers. “But make sure he remembers me?”

“How could anyone forget you?” I choked out.

That was our last real conversation. She slipped away the next morning, with my sisters Sarah and Katie holding one hand and me holding the other.

People at a funeral | Source: Pexels

People at a funeral | Source: Pexels

The first week after the funeral, I moved back home. Dad seemed lost, wandering the house like a ghost. I’d find him standing near Mom’s closet, just staring at her clothes. Or sitting in her garden, touching the roses she’d tended so carefully.

“He’s not eating,” Katie reported during our daily sister check-in calls. “I brought over lasagna, and it’s still sitting untouched in the fridge.”

“Same with the casserole I made,” Sarah added. “Should we be worried?”

I thought we should be. But then everything changed.

It started small. Two weeks after the funeral, Dad cleaned out Mom’s closet without telling any of us. Just boxed everything up and dropped it at the local charity.

An empty wardrobe | Source: Pexels

An empty wardrobe | Source: Pexels

“Her favorite sweater?” I asked, horrified when I found out. “The blue one she always wore for Christmas?”

“It’s just taking up space, Lily,” he said, suddenly practical. “Your mom wouldn’t want us dwelling.”

A few days later, he joined a gym. He started getting haircuts at some trendy place instead of the salon where Mom had known the owner for 20 years. He bought new clothes and even started humming while doing dishes. At 53, Dad was starting to act like a 20-year-old young man.

“He’s handling it differently,” Katie insisted during one of our emergency meetings at my apartment. “Everyone grieves in their own way.”

I was pacing, unable to sit still. “This isn’t grief. He’s acting like he just got released from prison instead of losing his wife of 30 years.”

A distressed woman | Source: Midjourney

A distressed woman | Source: Midjourney

Sarah curled up on my couch and tried to keep peace. “Maybe he’s trying to stay strong for us? You know how Mom always worried about him being alone.”

“There’s a difference between being strong and whatever this is,” I said, watching through my window as night fell over the city. “Something’s not right.”

I had no idea how not right things were about to get.

“Girls,” Dad called us into the living room one evening, his voice weirdly excited. “Family meeting. I have something important to tell you.”

He’d gotten all dressed up — a new shirt, pressed slacks, and polished shoes. He’d even put on cologne. Mom’s picture smiled down from the mantel as we gathered, and I swear Dad’s eyes looked delighted.

A senior man in a suit | Source: Pexels

A senior man in a suit | Source: Pexels

“I’ve met someone special,” he announced, practically bouncing on his feet. “Her name is Amanda, and I want you all to meet her.”

The silence that followed was deafening. Katie’s face went white. Sarah started fidgeting with her ring.

“What exactly do you mean you’ve met someone?” My voice came out strangled.

Dad’s smile never wavered. “I mean I’m not getting any younger, Lily. Life goes on. Amanda makes me happy, and I want her to be part of our family.”

“Part of our family?” Katie’s voice cracked. “Dad, Mom’s been gone for three weeks!”

“And what am I supposed to do?” He crossed his arms. “Sit alone in this empty house forever?”

A stunned young woman facing a man | Source: Midjourney

A stunned young woman facing a man | Source: Midjourney

“Maybe grieve?” I suggested, my anger rising. “Remember your wife? Our mother?”

“I am grieving,” he snapped. “But I’m also living. Your mother wouldn’t want me to be lonely all my life, girls!”

“Don’t.” I stood up. “Don’t you dare tell us what Mom would want. You don’t get to use her to justify this.”

Dad just walked away, scowling, leaving the three of us in a daze.

A week later, he dropped the next bomb.

“Christmas dinner,” he announced over the phone. “I want Amanda to join us.”

Close-up of a man holding his coat | Source: Pexels

Close-up of a man holding his coat | Source: Pexels

I nearly dropped my coffee mug. “You’re bringing her to Christmas dinner? Mom’s favorite holiday?”

“It’s the perfect time for everyone to meet,” he said, sounding irritatingly reasonable. “Amanda’s excited to meet you all. She’s even offered to help cook.”

“Help cook?” I gripped the phone tighter. “In Mom’s kitchen? Using Mom’s recipes?”

“Lily—”

“Mom’s been gone for four weeks, Dad. Four. Weeks.”

“And what should I do?” His voice rose. “Cancel Christmas? Sit alone while my daughters judge me?”

“Maybe respect Mom’s memory? Remember 30 years of marriage? The woman who spent last Christmas in the hospital still trying to make it special for everyone?”

A furious woman | Source: Midjourney

A furious woman | Source: Midjourney

“I’m still your father,” he said sharply. “And Amanda is coming to Christmas dinner. That’s final.”

“Fine.” I hung up and immediately called my sisters.

“He’s lost his mind,” Katie declared during our emergency video chat. “Completely lost it.”

Sarah looked like she might cry. “What do we do?”

I had an idea forming. A terrible, perfect idea.

Christmas Eve arrived cold and snowy. I spent the morning in Mom’s kitchen making her stuffing recipe. Every few minutes I caught myself turning to ask her a question, the grief hitting fresh each time I remembered she wasn’t there.

A woman decorating a Christmas tree | Source: Pexels

A woman decorating a Christmas tree | Source: Pexels

Katie arrived early to help, bringing Mom’s special tablecloth, the one with tiny embroidered holly leaves that Mom would spend hours ironing each year.

“I couldn’t sleep,” Katie admitted as we set the table. “Kept thinking about Mom, how she’d make us polish the silver until it sparkled.”

“Remember how she’d position everything just right?” Sarah added, arriving with pies. “The centerpiece had to be exactly in the middle.”

“And the photos,” I smiled sadly. “So many photos before anyone could eat.”

“Dad would complain his food was getting cold,” Katie laughed, then stopped abruptly. “God, I miss her.”

A sad woman with her eyes downcast | Source: Midjourney

A sad woman with her eyes downcast | Source: Midjourney

The doorbell rang at exactly six. Dad rushed to answer it, checking his reflection in the hall mirror first.

“Everyone,” his voice boomed with pride, “this is Amanda.”

I was stunned. She couldn’t have been older than 25. Long blonde hair, expensive boots, perfect makeup. She looked like she could have been our younger sister. My father looked like he’d won the lottery.

“This is your new MOM!” He announced, his arm around her waist. “I hope you all got her something nice for Christmas!”

Katie dropped her wine glass. The red spread across Mom’s white tablecloth like a wound, the holly leaves disappearing under the stain.

A woman smiling | Source: Midjourney

A woman smiling | Source: Midjourney

Dinner was excruciating. Amanda kept trying to make a conversation, her voice high and nervous.

“This stuffing is amazing,” she said. “Family recipe?”

“My mother’s recipe,” I replied, emphasizing each word. “She made it every Christmas for 30 years. This was her favorite holiday.”

“Oh.” Amanda pushed food around her plate. “I’m so sorry about your loss. George told me—”

“George?” I cut her off with a wicked grin. “You mean Dad?”

Dad cleared his throat. “Lily!”

A woman grinning | Source: Midjourney

A woman grinning | Source: Midjourney

“No, I want to know… when exactly did he tell you about Mom? Before or after he asked you out?”

“Lily, stop,” Dad whispered.

“Did he tell you she spent three years fighting cancer? That she was still having chemo this time last year?” I couldn’t stop. “That she made him promise to keep our family together?”

“That’s enough!” Dad’s voice thundered across the table.

Amanda looked close to tears. “I should probably—”

“No, stay,” Dad insisted. “Family gets uncomfortable sometimes. That’s normal.”

A startled woman | Source: Midjourney

A startled woman | Source: Midjourney

“Family?” I laughed bitterly. “She’s practically my age, Dad. This isn’t family. It’s creepy.”

“Present time!” Dad announced after dinner, desperate to change the mood. He’d always played Santa, but watching him do it now felt wrong.

I watched Amanda open gifts — a scarf from Katie, a gift card from Sarah. Then she reached for my carefully wrapped box.

“Oh, it’s beautiful,” she gasped, lifting out the antique jewelry box. Mom’s favorite, the one she’d kept her wedding ring in. “Thank you, Lily. This is so thoughtful.”

“Open it,” I said softly. “There’s something special inside.”

A woman holding a gift box | Source: Pexels

A woman holding a gift box | Source: Pexels

The room fell silent as she lifted the lid. Inside lay a photograph of Mom in her garden last summer, surrounded by her roses and all three of us girls beside her. Her last good day before the hospital. Her smile was still bright and full of life, even though we knew what was coming.

Beneath it lay my note: “You are not my mother. No one will ever replace her. Remember that.”

Amanda’s hands started shaking. “I… I need to go.”

“Honey, wait—” Dad reached for her, but she was already running, leaving her coat and muffler behind as she fled into the snowy night.

A woman walking away | Source: Pexels

A woman walking away | Source: Pexels

Dad came back inside alone, snow melting on his shoulders, his face ashen.

“What did you do?” he demanded.

“I gave her a reality check,” I stood my ground. “Did you really think you could replace Mom with someone my age and we’d just accept it?”

“You had no right,” he growled. “You’re not letting me live my life!”

“Live your life? Mom’s been dead for four weeks! Her side of the bed isn’t even cold!” I was shouting now, years of watching Mom suffer, weeks of watching Dad move on, all pouring out at once. “Did you even love her?”

An angry woman | Source: Pexels

An angry woman | Source: Pexels

“How dare you?” His voice broke. “I loved your mother for 30 years. I watched her fight. I watched her die. But she’s gone, Lily. She’s gone, and I’m still here. What am I supposed to do?”

“Not this,” I whispered, tears finally falling. “Anything but this.”

Katie and Sarah stood frozen, Christmas tree lights casting shadows on their tears. Outside, the snow continued to fall, covering Amanda’s footprints as she’d run away from our family’s broken pieces.

My dad blamed me for not letting him move on, but I think his actions were deeply disrespectful to my late mother. I firmly believe I did the right thing by defending her memory and making it unequivocally clear to Amanda that she could never fill my mother’s shoes.

A woman sitting on the couch | Source: Midjourney

A woman sitting on the couch | Source: Midjourney

This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

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