I never thought I’d become “that girl” — the insecure girlfriend who asks her man to delete old photos. But after what I found, I had no choice.
My name is Maya Thompson. I’m 28 years old and I’ve been with Alex for three years. We moved in together last year and got engaged four months ago. I genuinely believed he was my forever person — kind, ambitious, and someone who made me feel safe. Until I saw how much of his past he was still carrying around.
It started innocently. Alex asked me to help him pick photos for a new Instagram highlight reel of “our story.” While scrolling through his camera roll and old Facebook albums, I found hundreds of pictures of him and his ex, Chloe.
Not just a few casual shots.
Hundreds.
Vacation photos in Bali where she’s kissing his cheek.
Intimate couple selfies in bed.
Pictures of them at weddings, New Year’s Eve parties, even Christmas with his family. Some were taken just months before we met. In many of them, he’s looking at her the same way he now looks at me.
When I calmly asked him about it that night, his response shocked me.
“Those are memories, Maya. I’m not deleting my past just because you’re insecure.”
That word — insecure — hit like a slap.
I tried explaining. “It’s not about insecurity. It’s about respect. We’re engaged. I don’t want to see my future husband looking at another woman with that kind of love every time I open his phone or scroll through his profile.”
He got defensive. “Chloe was a big part of my life for five years. Deleting those photos doesn’t erase what happened. You’re asking me to pretend she never existed.”
The fight escalated. I told him it hurt every time I saw her face pop up in his memories or tagged in old posts. He accused me of trying to control him and rewrite his history.
The next day he told his mom what happened. Within hours, his entire family was involved.
His sister texted me: “You’re being unreasonable. Alex isn’t the type to cheat. Those photos are just photos.”
His mom called me directly: “Sweetheart, you can’t expect a man to erase his entire past when he meets someone new. That’s not healthy.”
Even some of my own friends said I might be overreacting. “Lots of people keep old photos. It doesn’t mean anything.”
But here’s the part I haven’t told many people.
Two years ago, before we moved in together, I found flirty messages between Alex and Chloe on his old laptop. He swore it was nothing, that he was just “closing the chapter.” I forgave him. I thought we moved past it. But those photos kept the chapter wide open.
Every time I see her smile next to him, I remember how he once told me she was “the one who really understood him.” Every vacation picture reminds me that he took her to the same places he now takes me. It makes me feel like I’m the sequel, not the main story.
Last night we had our biggest fight yet.
I told him straight: “If you really want to marry me, I need those photos gone. Not hidden — deleted. From your phone, your social media, your computer. All of them.”
He looked at me like I was a stranger. “If I delete them, will you finally trust me? Or will you find something else to be jealous about?”
I cried harder than I have in years. Because deep down, I don’t know the answer.
Now Alex has agreed to delete the public photos, but he’s keeping the private ones “for memories.” His family thinks I’m controlling and dramatic. Some of our mutual friends have started distancing themselves, saying the drama is too much.
I sit here rubbing the engagement ring on my finger, wondering if I’m destroying the best relationship I’ve ever had… or finally standing up for myself.
I still love Alex deeply. I want to build a future with him. But I can’t keep competing with a ghost who lives in hundreds of photos on his phone.
So I’m asking you honestly, no sugarcoating:
Am I the asshole for demanding my fiancé delete every photo with his ex? Or am I right to want a fresh start without her face constantly in our lives?
I’m reading every comment. Because our wedding is eight months away, and right now I feel like I’m planning a marriage that already has three people in it.
THE END
