When I married my husband, I knew about his ex. There were no kids, no drama, just a bit of history — or so I thought. At first, it didn’t bother me when he mentioned her. But soon, the “favors” began.
He’d drive her places when her car broke down. He’d answer her late-night calls because she “had no one else.” The final straw was when he left our anniversary dinner halfway through — to fix her leaking sink. I sat there alone, staring at the half-eaten cake, wondering if I was the fool for pretending it didn’t sting.
I told him how uncomfortable it made me. He just shrugged. “She doesn’t have anyone else,” he said. “You wouldn’t understand.”
Weeks passed, and then one evening, I got a text from my own ex. He’d moved nearby and asked if I could help him pick out furniture for his new apartment. Normally, I’d have said no. But something in me snapped. This time, I said yes.
When I told my husband, his face went pale. He didn’t say a word the whole night. The next morning, he woke up early, cleaned the kitchen, and sat beside me with a guilty look. “You’re right,” he said quietly. “I crossed a line.”
Sometimes people don’t understand how their actions feel — until they’re on the receiving end. I didn’t do it out of revenge. I did it to remind him that respect goes both ways.