The original poster (OP) and her ex-husband divorced 20 years ago after he made a major, unaffordable financial decision—buying a fancy car on debt without consulting her—which led to a severe conflict when she wanted him to sell it.
Following the divorce, the ex-husband sold the car but blamed the OP for it, engaging in nasty behavior toward her whenever their children were not present. Furthermore, he and his new wife explicitly told the OP that the new wife would be more important to the children than the OP, leading to years of emotional distress for the OP until the children eventually chose to live with her full-time.

AITA for telling my ex and his wife that she was the one who was nobody special or important after all?



















As family therapist and author Dr. Terry Real notes regarding toxic relationship dynamics, “When people are raised in systems where there is no accountability, they never learn how to take responsibility for their actions.”
The ex-husband and his subsequent wife consistently employed projection and gaslighting tactics, attempting to assert dominance and undermine the OP’s parental status by suggesting she would be replaced or deemed ‘nobody special.’ This behavior, occurring only outside the children’s presence, was a strategy to maintain control and manage their own insecurity about the family structure, exploiting the OP’s need to remain composed for her children’s sake. The OP’s restraint over two decades was a form of protective emotional labor, but the final confrontation offered a rare moment where she could articulate the impact of their behavior.
The OP’s final comment, while emotionally satisfying in the moment, clearly crossed into territory defined as petty gloating. While understandable given the history of emotional provocation, professional conflict resolution favors direct assertion of boundaries over reactive jabs. Moving forward, the OP should focus on maintaining the established no-contact boundaries with her ex and his wife, recognizing that her validation comes from her children’s choices, not from achieving final verbal victory in a confrontation.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.




















The OP is currently questioning the morality of her recent actions, specifically whether her satisfaction in confronting her ex-husband and his wife outweighs the pettiness of her final comment about the ex-wife not being called ‘mom’ by the children.
The central conflict revolves around whether the OP’s act of gloating was an appropriate, long-overdue response to years of emotional abuse, or if it placed her on the same moral level as her ex-partners; the reader must decide if the action warrants being labeled as the ‘a-hole’ (TA).







