My Husband Quit His Stable Job to ‘Become an Influencer’ and Expects Me to Pay for Everything

**My Husband Quit His Stable Job to ‘Become an Influencer’ and Expects Me to Pay for Everything**

When my husband first mentioned starting a YouTube channel, I thought it was a hobby. Something fun he could do after work—make a few videos, see what happens. I never imagined he’d walk into our kitchen one morning and say, with a smile on his face, “I quit my job.”

I nearly dropped my coffee. “You what?”

He beamed, like it was the best news in the world. “I’m going all in on becoming an influencer. YouTube, TikTok, brand deals—it’s the future. I just need a year to build it up. You’ll cover us until then, right?”

My stomach turned. His “stable job” was the reason we could afford our mortgage, our bills, our kids’ activities. I asked, “How are we supposed to survive while you chase likes?”

He waved me off. “Babe, it’s an investment. Everyone who’s big now had to start somewhere. I just need your support.”

Support. That word hit me like a brick. Support meant working overtime at my own job to cover what he abandoned. Support meant being the sole provider while he filmed himself playing video games or reviewing gadgets.

At first, I tried to be patient. I watched him spend hours adjusting lighting, scripting videos, practicing his “on-camera personality.” Meanwhile, the bills kept piling up—and every time I asked about money, he said, “Relax, I’ll be making more than both of us put together soon.”

The breaking point came last week. I came home from another late shift to find him live-streaming, laughing with strangers online while dirty dishes covered the counter and our kids were upstairs asking why Dad never made dinner.

I unplugged his ring light mid-sentence. His audience vanished, and he spun around in outrage.

“What the hell, I was live!”

“And I’m done!” I snapped. “Done carrying this family while you chase internet fame. You don’t get to quit being a husband and father to play celebrity in your head.”

He sneered. “You don’t believe in me. That’s the problem.”

“No,” I said coldly. “The problem is you don’t believe in reality. And I’m not funding your fantasy anymore.”

That night, I moved my paycheck into a separate account. The next morning, I handed him the bills. “If you want to be an influencer, then figure out how to pay for your own dreams. I’ll cover myself and the kids, but I won’t cover you.”

His face crumpled, half fury and half panic. But I meant it.

Here’s the truth: chasing dreams is fine—until it turns into expecting someone else to sacrifice everything for them. Love isn’t about carrying someone who refuses to walk.

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