Battle between sexes as a woman posts concerns about her shifty fiance who then shows up to "defend himself".

7  2018-05-15 by reallyrunningnow

A young woman plans to marry her much older fiance in two month. However she had some concerns about him, that warranted a nice juicy r/relationship_advice post.. Particularly this:

For starters, he's putting together a prenup without letting me see it. He keeps talking about "no divorce" and how I'll never be able to leave him. I know it sounds weird but he's a genuinely good person and I think he's mostly joking.

She mentions how he is a "great guy" though broke but also has a failing dog training startup. This then got cross posted r/legaladvice where someone mentioned that her fiance was actually stalking her Reddit account too and posted this in response. He claims that:

Well someone said my "failing" business would make her financially at risk. This man has no reason to think of it as failing.

And asks for advice to "steer her in the right direction". But still refuses to let her see the prenup. Then flips when people call him out.

You're in no place to comment on my business. You're only siding with "them" because you're one of them. Reddit has a serious problem with making assumptions and making mistakes. You're very much a part of that.

4 comments

You're not shit next to me. My genes are just light years superior to yours and I don't even need to look at you.

Snapshots:

  1. This Post - archive.org, megalodon.jp*, removeddit.com, archive.is

  2. nice juicy r/relationship_advice po... - archive.org, megalodon.jp*, removeddit.com, archive.is

  3. r/legaladvice - archive.org, megalodon.jp*, archive.is*

  4. this - archive.org, megalodon.jp*, removeddit.com, archive.is

I am a bot. (Info / Contact)

Wtf does he have in the prenup that she can't see?

It's an /r/relationship_advice post where both parties unexpectedly turn up to fight it out. In other words it's a creative-writing troll.

Pretty pointless to not let her see the prenup, since she's gotta see it, along with her attorney, in order to sign it. Judges generally often don't like prenups anyway, and any hint of duress is enough to get them tossed out. Hell, many lawyers recommend video taping the prenup signing, along with oral recitations regarding it, for just this reason.