My Wife Wants to Spend Thousands on a Wedding Anniversary Party While We’re in Debt

**My Wife Wants to Spend Thousands on a Wedding Anniversary Party While We’re in Debt**

When we got married ten years ago, we promised each other we’d always live within our means. No matter how much or how little we had, we’d be practical. We’d focus on building a life, not putting on a show.

Somewhere along the way, my wife forgot that.

We’re drowning in credit card debt. The mortgage is barely manageable, and my car needs repairs I’ve been putting off for months. Every bill feels like a small fire I’m constantly trying to put out.

So when she sat me down at the kitchen table last week, her face glowing with excitement, and said, “I’ve been thinking—we should throw a huge anniversary party this year. Rent a venue, caterers, maybe even a band,” I nearly choked on my coffee.

“How much are we talking?” I asked carefully.

“Oh, not too much,” she said, waving her hand. “Maybe ten, fifteen thousand? It’s our ten-year anniversary. It should be special.”

I stared at her. “Ten to fifteen *thousand*? We don’t even have that money.”

She frowned, already defensive. “We’ll put it on a credit card. Or maybe take out a small loan. People do it all the time.”

My chest tightened. “People also go bankrupt all the time. We’re already in debt. How can you think this is a good idea?”

She crossed her arms. “Because it’s important to me. We’ve been through so much, and I want to celebrate us. Don’t you care about our marriage?”

That cut deep. I care about our marriage more than anything, but I don’t equate love with throwing money we don’t have at strangers for one fancy night.

The breaking point came a few days later when I found a brochure for a ballroom rental in her purse, along with estimates from a catering company. She hadn’t just been dreaming—she was planning.

That night, I confronted her. “You’re really going to do this, aren’t you? You’re going to drag us deeper into debt for one night of showing off.”

She glared at me. “It’s not showing off. It’s celebrating our love.”

I snapped. “Our love doesn’t need a damn banquet hall. What our love needs is stability, a roof over our heads, and a future that doesn’t involve collectors calling us every month.”

She went quiet, her jaw tight, but I didn’t stop. “If you go through with this, if you take out a loan for a party while we’re already sinking, then you’re not just celebrating our marriage—you’re destroying it.”

I could see the hurt in her eyes, but also the stubbornness. And that scared me more than anything.

That night, while she slept, I gathered all the credit cards and locked them in my desk drawer. The next morning, I told her plainly: “I love you. But I will not let you bury us in debt for a party. If you want to celebrate, we’ll have a small dinner with close friends. That’s it. If you can’t accept that, then maybe this anniversary is the last one we’ll spend together.”

It was brutal, and I know some people will say I was too harsh. But here’s the truth: a marriage isn’t measured in chandeliers and champagne fountains. It’s measured in whether you can face reality together.

And if she can’t face reality with me, then maybe we’re not standing on the same side anymore.

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