It sounds like the setup for a soap opera: a couple together for 12 years, a husband who won’t work, a mother-in-law with a strong opinion, and then—because the universe has a sense of drama—a psychic enters the chat. But for one woman, this isn’t entertainment. It’s her real life, and she says the accusation now hanging over her marriage is as surreal as it is scary: “witchcraft.”

According to her account, things were already strained long before anything “mystical” came into the picture. Money was tight, resentment was building, and she says she’d been carrying the practical load for years. Then her husband and his mom consulted a psychic, and suddenly she wasn’t just the person paying bills and managing the household—she was the alleged reason his life “can’t prosper.”
Twelve Years In, and the Work Problem Never Went Away
The woman describes a relationship that started with love and normal hopes, then slowly slid into an exhausting imbalance. She says her husband hasn’t held consistent work for a long time, often quitting jobs or avoiding them altogether. Over the years, she claims she became the default provider, organizer, and emotional shock absorber.
If you’ve ever been the only adult in a two-adult household, you know what that does to a person. It’s not just the paycheck—it’s the constant mental math: rent, groceries, car repairs, and that quiet dread of, “If I get sick, everything collapses.” She says she’s tried conversations, encouragement, and even ultimatums, but nothing sticks.
Enter the Psychic: A “Reading” That Turned Into a Blame Game
Then came the psychic consultation, which she says her husband and mother-in-law treated like an official diagnostic report on his life. The message they brought back was blunt: if he “gets rid of her,” his fortunes will improve. And, somehow, she became tied to spiritual sabotage—whether that’s “witchcraft,” “bad energy,” or the vague idea that she’s blocking his success.
It’s the kind of accusation that’s hard to defend against because it isn’t rooted in anything you can disprove. How do you argue with a claim that lives entirely in someone else’s belief system? She says she tried to laugh it off at first, assuming it would pass, but the tone shifted from weird to hostile.
When a Mother-in-Law Becomes a Co-Signer on the Accusation
Family dynamics can be complicated on a good day, but she says her mother-in-law isn’t playing a background role here—she’s actively reinforcing the narrative. Instead of telling her son to get a job, show up, and handle his responsibilities, the mother has allegedly joined him in pointing the finger at the wife. It’s a neat little trick: if the problem is “spiritual,” nobody has to talk about employment, effort, or accountability.
And that’s what makes this situation sting in a very particular way. The woman says she feels like she’s being scapegoated for years of his choices, with a supernatural twist added to make it feel unquestionable. In her view, it’s less about a psychic and more about permission—permission for him to avoid change while still believing he’s the victim.
Why “Witchcraft” Accusations Can Be More Dangerous Than They Sound
On the surface, “witchcraft” might sound like something you’d roll your eyes at and move on. But in real relationships, accusations like this can slide into emotional abuse fast. Once someone believes you’re secretly harming them, normal conflict turns into suspicion, monitoring, and sudden “tests” of loyalty.
It can also become a justification for cruelty. If he convinces himself she’s the cause of his bad luck, then anything he does to “remove the curse” starts to feel reasonable to him. The woman says that’s what frightens her: not the psychic itself, but how quickly her husband’s attitude has shifted into blame and contempt.
What This Really Looks Like: Avoidance, Control, and a Convenient Villain
People who don’t want to face their own patterns often go hunting for explanations that let them stay the same. A psychic reading can become a tidy story: “It’s not that I won’t work; it’s that my wife is blocking me.” It’s a narrative that replaces action with accusation and turns self-improvement into a breakup plan.
It also puts the wife in an impossible bind. If she defends herself, she’s “proving she’s manipulative.” If she stays calm, she’s “cold and calculating.” If she cries, she’s “using tears.” In situations like this, the goalposts move because the point isn’t truth—it’s control.
The Financial Reality: If He Won’t Work, Who Benefits From You Leaving?
There’s another layer the woman can’t ignore: money. If she’s the one keeping things afloat, then “getting rid of her” doesn’t exactly sound like a plan for prosperity. It sounds like a plan for immediate consequences—unless someone else steps in to fund his life, or he assumes she’ll keep supporting him anyway.
This is where the situation can get particularly messy. Some partners threaten separation to regain power, not because they’re actually prepared to take responsibility. The “prosperity” storyline can be less about future success and more about pressuring her into compliance: apologize, pay up, and stop asking him to change.
How People in Similar Situations Are Protecting Themselves
In stories like this, friends and counselors often focus on practical safety first. That can mean securing personal documents, separating finances, and making sure there’s a safe place to stay if the home environment escalates. Even if things never get physical, emotional instability plus paranoia can create unpredictable situations.
It can also mean documenting what’s being said—screenshots, dates, and summaries of conversations—especially if threats or intimidation start showing up. Nobody wants to think that way about their spouse, but planning doesn’t mean panic. It means taking yourself seriously.
What a Healthy Next Step Might Look Like (And What Probably Won’t Work)
The woman says she’s torn between trying to “fix” the misunderstanding and realizing this might be the last straw. Relationship experts tend to agree on one thing: you can’t reason someone out of a belief they’re using to avoid accountability. If he’s committed to the psychic narrative, debating it may only deepen the conflict.
A more grounded approach is to focus on boundaries and reality-based expectations. Things like: consistent employment, shared household responsibilities, respectful communication, and no involvement of third parties (including relatives) in marital decisions. If he refuses those basics, the issue isn’t witchcraft—it’s that he’s choosing a story over a partnership.
A Marriage Can’t Compete With a Fantasy That Excuses Everything
After 12 years, the woman isn’t asking for perfection. She’s asking for a husband who participates in adult life and doesn’t outsource blame to a psychic and a parent. That’s a low bar, and the fact that it’s not being met is, in itself, a kind of answer.
For now, she says she’s thinking carefully about her options and leaning on people she trusts. Because when someone tells you they’ll “prosper” if they “get rid of you,” it’s worth hearing them clearly. Even if the accusation is absurd, the intent behind it can be painfully real.
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As a mom of three busy boys, I know how chaotic life can get — but I’ve learned that it’s possible to create a beautiful, cozy home even with kids running around. That’s why I started Cultivated Comfort — to share practical tips, simple systems, and a little encouragement for parents like me who want to make their home feel warm, inviting, and effortlessly stylish. Whether it’s managing toy chaos, streamlining everyday routines, or finding little moments of calm, I’m here to help you simplify your space and create a sense of comfort.
But home is just part of the story. I’m also passionate about seeing the world and creating beautiful meals to share with the people I love. Through Cultivated Comfort, I share my journey of balancing motherhood with building a home that feels rich and peaceful — and finding joy in exploring new places and flavors along the way.


