I Refuse to Give My Son’s Belongings to My Ex-Husband’s Kids—Absolutely Not

Family & kids
11/18/2025
I Refuse to Give My Son’s Belongings to My Ex-Husband’s Kids—Absolutely Not

Shared custody can get tricky when new family members enter the picture. One mother faced a heated conflict after giving her son a gift for his birthday and setting simple hygiene rules. What followed was a storm of accusations and judgment, and she still isn’t sure if she handled it the right way.

Hey Bright Side,

I’m Emily, 38, and I’ve shared custody of my son, Liam, ever since my ex-husband left when Liam was 2. He spends weekends at his dad’s house, which is now shared with his new wife and her two children.

For Liam’s 12th birthday, I bought him high-quality earphones. I told him clearly not to share them with anyone, because hygiene matters: I didn’t want him getting sick or catching colds from germs. I thought it was a reasonable rule.

But as soon as his stepmom found out, she called me a “bad mother,” claiming I was making excuses and being selfish. I was shocked.

Later, I discovered she had already taken Liam’s earphones and let her own kids use them behind my back. I felt betrayed and furious, not just for the gift, but for the disrespect toward me as his parent.

I haven’t confronted them yet, because I’m torn between staying calm or going full drama mode. Should I let it go for the sake of peace, or stand my ground and demand respect for my rules?

— Emily

Here is what we think, Emily.

If have the receipt for the earbuds inform the ex need them returned to your son ASAP or can always report them stolen, or take ex to court about fact he's allowing his wife to take things from Liam for their kids that they didn't purchase

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Keep the expensive ones at home and send a cheap pair to the ex's house. Just tell your son. Let's just keep the good stuff at home so it don't get broken. There's is no winning with people that like and enjoy chaos.Because one day, karma will come around and slap the sht out of you.

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I agree with Cheryl don't let him take them to your ex's house. You need to go nuclear to get them back and from now on your son can't take anything over there.

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Aww HELL NO! Let some rando take my kids headphones and give them to her brats I'm doing at least 30 days in jail cuz I'm going ape shit on EX first then RANDO!! Both would feel my wrath. MY child will not share IF she doesn't want to! Grrrr I hate when the step acts evil it's disgusting!

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She's not a "rando" she's the boys step mom and they all need to act like adults and talk it out setting up guidelines. And for the mother your child isn't going to get sick from sharing earbuds!! Expensive items shouldn't be bought for young children anyway!! And you need anger management!!

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just now
The comment has hidden itself outside our galaxy.

Why? save all the wrath and bad example. Just leave them at home. Maybe the ex can not afford such luxuries? The siblings wil not understand and will probably grow up to resent your son. Come on people, lets be kind! The world it's so ugly already, lets not add to it, teach love, kindness and empathy!

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THE SAD PART ABOUT ALL OF THIS, IS THAT EMILY'S SON IS BEING FORCED TO "SHARE" HIS EXPENSIVE HEADPHONES, OR LEAVE THEM AT HOME. IT IS CLEAR THAT THE STEPMOM, DOESN'T CARE ABOUT HIM, JUST WHAT HE CAN PROVIDE FOR HER KIDS, SO SHE DOESN'T HAVE TO. THE BIO-DAD IS THE PROBLEM HERE. IT IS NOT EMILY'S RESPONSIBILITY TO PROVIDE ANYTHING FOR CHILDREN THAT SHE HAS NO RELATIONSHIP WITH. SHE ALSO SHOULD NOT HAVE TO PROVIDE "CHEAP" ONES FOR HER KID TO "SHARE" AT HIS FATHER'S HOUSE.

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What is wrong with you? This is your child and their health and hygiene, forget drama mode go apocalypse on them and make sure it doesn't happen again. There will only ever be you to protect your child so step up.

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Get full drama, or she might treat you and your son WORSE. Call police if she refuse to return it or doing something out of line

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IF YOU BUY A CAR FOR YOUR KID, ARE YOU GOING TO LET SOME KID YOU DON'T KNOW DRIVE IT, JUST BECAUSE THEY ARE STEPS TO YOUR KID?
IT IS THE SAME PRINCIPAL HERE. MAYBE EMILY CAN'T AFFORD TO REPLACE THEM IF THEY GET RUINED BY THE STEPS. DAD AND STEPMOM SHOULD BE PROVIDING FOR HER KIDS, NOT EMILY.

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Also, considering you defending that act of crime, I might as well meet your grandchildren and rob EVERYTHING from them including their clothes and give it all to my grandchildren. You defend that kind of act, so you shouldn't mind if it happen to you, right ?

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Just DON'T LET HIM BRING THEM TO HIS DAD'S HOUSE! Then calmly tell the new wife AND your ex YOU ARE NOT PAYING FOR HER KIDS ACCESSORIES. If your son is ok with sharing, by his OWN CHOICE, see if his dad will by a set to use at HIS HOUSE ONLY. Then the other siblings will have to SHARE THEIR EARPHONES WITH YOUR SON. If that doesn't work, go full force and let them know that you WILL NOT PUT UP WITH THEIR CRAP. How you do that is up to you.

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Emily, dear, it’s completely normal to feel protective over your child’s belongings, especially in a blended family. Instead of focusing on the conflict itself, try to center your approach on teaching your child values and making your reasoning clear.

Start by calmly explaining why certain items are just for them. For example, you might say, These earphones are yours because sharing can spread germs, and I want you to stay healthy.” Framing it as care rather than control often makes children (and adults) more receptive.

At the same time, encourage respect for personal property. Praise Liam when he follows the rules and gently remind him when he forgets. Modeling consistent behavior will help him understand the importance of responsibility.

When it comes to communicating with your ex or stepfamily, keep the tone factual and neutral. You can:

  • Explain your rules clearly without blaming anyone.
  • Offer alternatives for shared activities or items if needed.
  • Focus on what’s best for your child rather than engaging in arguments.

Finally, remember that the main goal isn’t to “win” against step-siblings or their parents, it’s to help your child understand boundaries, hygiene, and self-respect. Teaching these lessons calmly and consistently will have a lasting impact, even if tensions flare in the short term.

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