Okay, I don't agree with everything the stepmother said, because teens act this way. I'm not saying it's right but she should have a serious conversation with her husband about his daughter's disrespect of her. They should decide together how to handle it. If necessary counseling. That being said, I as the stepmother would not take him telling her not to decide how to discipline his daughter was also disrespectful. If she has to take her to school, she should definitely be able to set the parameters. I think she handled it the way she should have. Even if she had called the girl and said she would be there early she still would have shown her disrespect. I wouldn't drive her until we all came to an agreement. Consider UberTeen. I hear it's reasonable and less headaches for parents.
I Refuse to Be a Parent to My Stepdaughter—I’ve Had Enough
Being a parent is never easy, and it comes with stages as children grow older. It’s a challenge already, but to have a teen around can be the most dramatic part of parenting. During adolescence, teens experience a big shift, growth, and development that affects not only their being, but they might affect the people around them. Our Bright Side reader shared her sentiments about how she’s had enough of her teen stepdaughter.
It all started with a routine.
She shared her story, “I (42F) have been married to my husband for four years. He has a 15-year-old daughter from a previous marriage. I usually drive her to school in the mornings as her house is on the way to my work, and my husband picks her up in the afternoons. That’s been our routine for about a year now.
But lately, my stepdaughter has been acting like a classic spoiled teen. She treats both me and her dad like garbage, like we’re just there to serve her, not like actual people.
She says things like, ‘I’ll go ahead at the mall, so people don’t think we come together,’ or ‘Don’t leave me right out front at school,’ and ‘Don’t kiss me when you pick me up, my friends are watching.’ Once, she even told my husband to drop her off a block away from a party because ‘it’s embarrassing to be seen with parents.’
I was understanding because she’s in her puberty, and I remember doing stuff like that as well when I was a teen. However, she rolls her eyes at everything, never says thank you, and makes us feel like our presence is just a burden. She also spends her allowance like there’s no tomorrow. I’m her stepmother, but she doesn’t treat me like one. She looks at me as if she’s above me.”
She’s been patient, but she finally hit her limit.
She continued, “On Fridays, she has a late start at school. A while back, she told me I needed to start picking her up at 8:30 sharp, like I’m some on-demand driver. I told her I’d do my best, but I have a job and a schedule too.
This last Friday, I got to her house to pick her up for school at 8:15, and texted her to let her know I was already outside. I realized I was early and figured I could wait a couple of minutes for her, but my blood boiled the moment I read her text saying, ‘I’ll be down at 8:30. That’s the time I said.’ No acknowledgment that I was early, no hint of a kindly ask to wait for her, just a demand.
I took a deep breath to calm my nerves and waited for 8:30 to strike the clock, but when it did, no sign of her. So I texted her again, but her response displeased me. She said, ‘Why are you so impatient? It’s your fault for being here so early.’
That was it for me. I realized I was being walked all over, and I decided to stop enabling that behavior. So I left.”
But what she did put her in a bad light.
She added, “Later, my husband called, furious because she had called him crying, saying I had left her and made her late. Then his ex called, accusing me of being cruel and selfish. With little time to process their consecutive calls, I was taken aback by their reaction.
When I explained my side, my husband said I had no right to decide how to discipline his daughter or ‘teach her a lesson.’ That’s when I told him, ‘If I don’t have any parental rights, then I’m not accepting parental duties either. I’m not her driver, her maid, or her emotional punching bag.’
Now things are tense at home, and everyone’s acting like I overreacted and was wrong for what I did. But I honestly think I just stood up for myself and stopped letting a teenager treat me like her assistant. I’ve had enough of dealing with her spoiled behavior.
But if I am to ask, was I wrong for doing that?”
Thank you for sharing your story. Here’s some advice you might want to consider.


This is normal behavior for a 14-16 year old but that doesn't mean you have to take it. You were right to pull away and you're right to say what you did about not dealing with it since you have no authority. I suggest couples therapy. You need someone in your corner.
I found step parenting incredibly challenging. I agree with the idea that if you have no right to discipline or parent, then you have no obligation to be of service. the bottom line is everyone deserves respect.
You did the absolute thing you should have done. I can't discipline her as a parent then I dont take care of her as a parent or run errands or drive to school or the mall or anything. IF that is the way dad sees it, dad has no respect for you.
You aren't her mom. Let her parents deal with it. If you was her step mom since she's a little girl it be a whole different thing but you aren't.
it's about respect. a step parent and step child deserve that
Sounds like you have both a stepdaughter and her parents problem. Remind them their daughter is their problem and not yours and stick to it.
Having someone drive you to school is a privilege not a right. Even if it is on your way you still are leaving early and risking being late to work. Not to mention the gas and milage on your car. The big one is top start keeping your finances separate if you do not already do this. You will be shocked at how much of the joint funds are spent because of her. All the little things add up.
If she wants to act like a spoiled brat and treat you like an Uber driver and her father and mother won't do anything about her behavior and you can't do anything to keep her in check, then you shouldn't have anything to do with her. And if your husband can't understand your side, then it's time for him to go, permanently.
No girl. You didn't. I've got 5 kids and the oldest I didn't birth myself
If any of them treat me like that they can walk to school.
You did overreact, you are cruel, and you are selfish. Like most parental complainers on here, you describe epic, world ending disrespect, but then the details you give are just par for the course, routine teen attitudes. Perhaps your overdramatic reactions are driving YOUR teens behavior. And yeah, by the way, another word for stepparent is PARENT. you don't get to decide whether to be there for your family or not, unless you want to stop burdening your husband with your presence also. Grow up ... and another thing ... parents are embarrassing, your DAUGHTER is right, back off and start treating her concerns as if they're real, because they're a lot more legit then yours. 47-year-old dad of 4 reporting, here, so no age bias from this end.
You are so wrong. We don't need an another entitled brat. Stepdaughter isn't learning any lessons here. Maybe to be rude and unlikely.
Not one person agrees with you. I'd bet you are a true blue narcissist & control freak with your children. I feel sorry for them.
How so? A narcissist withholds affection as a punishment like this stepmonster did, that is being a control freak. People who deserve their bio and step children give up their independent lives for them, regardless of formalized, authoritarian versions of respect.
Your reply is just plain wrong. That girl needs the consequences. Her behavior is too entitled.
Let me guess you were and entitled stepchild that expected a stepparent to worship the ground you walked on.
Actually, my parents actually had kids with the person they wanted to be with. I'm a stepdad, and speak with more authority on this matter then any fool that would make assumptions like this. Learn to remain silent when your betters are talking.
some of the daughter's antics go totally with her age but the disrespect stops. No room for that. That step daughter needs manners. I wouldn't drive her across the street. Ask my niece how long it took her in the early 90s to pay for AT&t to come and reconnect the wall and bedroom phones after she rudely said something into the phone while I was speaking with a client. I cut the wires.
She was told "she's not your daughter." So, why should she act like a parent? Can't have it both ways.
This. Step parents are NOT parents, nor should they be expected to be. They are caring adults in the child's life and should try to build a genuine bond. But it can't be forced and it doesn't replace parenting. Parents who insist step-parents are "just as responsible" are largely lazy parents trying to pass off their responsibilities on a new spouse.
I totally agree. This is a parenting issue. You are raising a disrespectful little terrorist. Just wait until she gets out in the cold cruel world. Then she can truly learn consequences. Like getting fired for not accepting rules.
Because children don't make decisions for adults. She can act as if your not a parental figure if she wants, but you still invaded her family, not the other way round, and your responsibilities do not lessen on her sayso.
Are you sure you're not this child's parent?
Dude, no. Just..no.
Another world for step-parent is middle management. Zero rights, all the responsibility. Step mom was right to remove herself from the equation. She should stay in the background and let the parents deal with the kid's transportation. Her role is "caring adult" not "parent". If my natural born kid treated me like that, she would be making arrangements with the bus barn herself and riding the bus to school.
Disrespect is disrespect, as a stepparent. Coming to a relationship with teenagers involved. You are not the parent , nor are they your child. Consideration, affection, respect is earned not demanded. Why should she bow to an entitled teenager. Let the bioparent deal with their child. 62 years old mother, adoptive mother, stepparent.
If you think those things have to be earned by a child, then you are the entitled one. Children deserve consideration, affection and respect regardless of whether they display a mildly edgy attitude. You, as the adult, are the one that has to earn it, something this woman utterly failed to do.
Soooo, the stepmother deserves to be reminded that she's NOT the parent of the precious hellspawn, is that it???
We found the OPs husband.
Nope, I'm not a bio dad pushing parenting off on poor defenseless stepmother. I'm the stepparent ... I'm just a lot better at it then emotionally crippled, weak stepmother your all trying to defend. Some of us actually make emotional attachments to our steps, meaning we greet these sort of situations with understanding by being the adult in the situation. And guess what, understanding makes the behavior disappear faster then authoritarian abuse ever will.
Youre a guy so any parenting of a stepchild you'd dump on your spouse. But then you'd do the same as OPs husband- tell her not to parent or discipline your kid. Can't have it both ways there, Mattie. Either shes your partner or shes not. You let your kid disrespect her and you'll be looking for wife # 3 cuz youre an idiot and your kid is an entitled brat- and you created that monster.
Wow, that's some next level sexism there. I'll have you know i parent my kids better than any nasty authoritarian loser like you. You are, by sheer luck I imagine, right about one thing ... a step parent is a full partner. That means we take disrespect with a grain of salt, master our feelings in a way that you apparently cannot, and calmly teach proper behavior, no abandonment (physical or emotional) required. Funny how people that winge on about respect are only the sad losers who don't deserve it, like you. Perhaps you should, in future, be silent and learn when gifted with the opportunity to listen to your betters.
Understandably, you’re feeling overwhelmed and hurt in this situation. Exploring stepparent dynamics, especially with teenagers, can be incredibly challenging, even when everyone has the best intentions. It seems like you’ve been making a genuine effort to support your stepdaughter and keep the household running smoothly, but have been left feeling unappreciated and disrespected.
Your decision to leave instead of continuing to wait may not have been about punishment, but about setting a boundary after repeated instances of feeling taken for granted. Still, it’s also natural that your stepdaughter and her parents might see it differently, especially in the heat of the moment.
It could help to have an open and calm conversation with your husband where you both talk about roles, expectations, and support, without placing blame. Express how this situation has made you feel, and invite him to help find a solution that respects everyone’s needs.
If tensions remain high, a family therapist might offer a safe, neutral space to work through these issues together. You’re not alone in feeling stuck; many stepparents struggle with similar challenges, and asking for balance and respect is a valid and important step.
In another story, an overbearing son-in-law disrespected her late husband’s memory, causing a woman to set a boundary she never expected she’d have to do. Find out the rest of the story through this link.
Comments
What a rotten teenager.
Sometimes people have to understand that your peace is more important than anything or anyone else you did what was best for you
Yep you have a husband problem. If he's not going to have your back then there is a problem in your marriage. I wouldn't lift another finger for that family and I would either get marriage counseling or I would probably leave my husband.
The best lesson you can teach a child is when youre asking for a ride there is only one rule....be in the car on time, or be left behind.

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