Purposely wrinkling your husband's clothes? Talk about being childish. I think a bit of growing up is in order. As far as your two daughters. He is responsible for his as you are responsible for yours. Did you help pay for his daughter's new car. No. You don't even have a job. Get a job and pay for your daughter. And while you're at it go after her father. He owes child support both past and presence. In the meantime there's something called student loans, scholarships and grants. Look into it.
My Husband Refused to Pay for My Daughter’s Tuition, So I Showed Him My True Face

Life can test us in the most unexpected ways, especially when it comes to family and finances. Many people struggle with balancing love, responsibility, and money, and sometimes those struggles bring out a side of us we never thought we had. Stories like these often spark heated conversations online, as they touch on values, respect, and fairness in relationships. Recently, we received a letter from a reader who wanted to share her own experience on this very subject.
Heidi’s letter:
Hi Bright Side,
My name is Heidi. I’ve been married to my husband Simon for 12 years.
I have an 18 y.o. daughter from a previous relationship, and he has a daughter from his first marriage.
In September, my stepdaughter turned 16, and my husband bought her a brand-new car, an Audi.
I asked him to contribute to my daughter’s college fund to make things fair for both girls.
My daughter has been working double shifts to pay for her college and he should contribute too.
He replied, “I’m not responsible for your child. Get a job if you want to help her, or ask her dad!”
He knows full well that her father is not in our lives.
I smiled because I had a plan. That night, without telling anyone, I listed everything in the house that was mine for sale online: furniture I had brought with me, belongings I’d purchased before quitting my job to focus on raising the girls. Nearly half of what filled that house was mine.
The next day, I went to our closet and wrinkled every piece of clothing I had carefully ironed for him. In the kitchen, I left a deliberate mess.

When Simon came home from work, he shook with shock at the sight, half the house empty and my luggage waiting at the door. I told him I could no longer live with a man who treats my daughter like a stranger, even though he’d been in her life since she was 6.
He reminded me that he had raised her. I answered that while he’d done the bare minimum for my child, he had spared no expense for his own, and this was the breaking point.
I wanted him to see the truth: it was me who had turned his house into a home all these years. Without me and my daughter, it would be left empty, both literally and emotionally.
I am filing for divorce, though my friends insist I shouldn’t throw away 12 years of marriage over this.
Am I overreacting, or am I finally doing what’s right?
Heidi
Thank you for sharing this, Heidi. Your story shows a situation that isn’t just about money — it’s about fairness, loyalty, and whether your marriage ever truly felt like a partnership. You invested in building a home, raising both girls, and sacrificing your own career, while Simon dismissed your daughter’s future as “not his responsibility.”
Here are 4 tips to help you in this delicate situation.
Reframe the “Car vs. College Fund” as a Symbol of Values.

Ridiculous. Why sell all your belongings and then move out to an empty new place? It's not like your belongings would put a dent in college fees. But really though, dad buying his bio a car is perfectly fine. It's not his fault stepdaughter's dad isn't in the picture. That would then fall on you. That's the reality of broken families and parents. I'm surprised it took this long for you to figure it out
Don't expect child support or alimony. Now you will have to get a job.
I would be glad you're gone.
The thing is you just sold all your stuff and then you leave. That doesn't make sense. I would have sold his stuff and took your stuff and left. Now you have to buy all new stuff. Yes you made a point but at what cost.
You and your husband deserve each other. Your daughters deserve better from both of you.
Get out of that marriage.
Divorce him and enjoy life without him and his spoiled daughter. Show your daughter she counts. And lol at selling everything.
Piss on that man 12 years you deserve better so lose your daughter and I would take him for everybody I can get
I did not mean lose your daughter but lose him and his daughter
Why is HIS DAUGHTER SPOILED? Neither parent talked to the other about anything besides who has to pay for the others child. IF YOU MARRY SOMEONE WITH CHILDREN YOU WILL ALWAYS TAKE A BACK SEAT TO THOSE CHILDREN. In this case you both did it. The children are the ones who pay the most.
- Situation: Simon gifted his daughter an expensive Audi while refusing even a contribution to your daughter’s education.
- Advice: Point out that the issue isn’t the money — it’s the value system. He chose status (a luxury car) over investing in a child’s future. Ask yourself: is this the kind of role model you want influencing your daughter?
- Why it Matters: This isn’t about comparing gifts. It’s about recognizing what kind of priorities you’ve been living alongside for 12 years.
Decide Whether Divorce Is About Justice or Liberation.

You are a pathetic person, you quit your job. Why did you expect your husband to pay for all the household bills plus pay your daughter’s college? He’s better off without you.
- Situation: Friends say don’t “throw away 12 years,” but for you, this moment wasn’t about one argument, it was the breaking point.
- Advice: Be brutally honest with yourself: is filing for divorce about punishing him for this one cruel dismissal, or freeing yourself and your daughter from years of imbalance? If it’s liberation, then it’s not throwing away 12 years, it’s reclaiming the years you have left.
- Why it Matters: Knowing whether you’re driven by anger or clarity will decide how peacefully (or painfully) you move forward.
Talk Honestly With Your Stepdaughter.
- Situation: Right now, she may only see the “gift,” not the impact it had on the rest of the family.
- Advice: Have an honest, age-appropriate conversation with her, not to blame, but to explain. Tell her gently: “I want you to enjoy your car, but I also want you to understand why your stepsister and I feel hurt.” Acknowledge that it’s not her fault, but she deserves to know the bigger picture.
- Why it Matters: It prevents resentment from forming between the two girls, shows her you respect her maturity at 16, and plants the seed for her to see the unfairness herself — something that could influence how she relates to both you and her father in the future.
Restart and Build Independence for Yourself.
- Situation: After years of relying on Simon’s decisions, you now face divorce and the need to rebuild.
- Advice: Treat this as a restart, update your skills, return to work if possible, and design a life where your choices aren’t tied to his approval or contributions.
- Why it Matters: It shifts the story from a couple’s conflict to your own path forward, showing your daughter that strength comes from creating stability and independence on your own terms.
To brighten your day, here are 11 wholesome stories about people who seem to have angels protecting their every step.
Comments
Sounds like Simon is a real creep.
You marry someone with a six year old child. That child pretty much becomes yours as well. If you can't do that, then don't get married.
Look at "The Brady Bunch" for your example of a blended family. Yeah it's TV, but it truly represents way a blended family should ultimately treat each other.
Wow, what an incredibly childish woman you are, OP. Instead of using your grown-up words, you went thru his closet and wrinkled all of his clothes? Really? And you don't see how childish you're being?
He's right. His daughter has him and his ex-wife to meet the financial needs of their daughter, your daughter has you and your ex-husband to meet her financial needs. Why does the responsibility of paying for your daughter's college education fall on him? Why does her own father get a free pass?
Yes, you've been married for 12 years, but have you ever seen him as a husband? Or is he just your convenient ATM?
Did you have a discussion about financial expectations before you got married? If not, I can’t say that I’m surprised with this outcome. Not that I don’t get where you’re coming from, but it should work both ways, too. Did you treat his daughter as an equal the same way you wanted him to treat your daughter (not necessarily monetarily per se, but at least in other practical senses)? I can’t and won’t weigh in with an opinion about what you or anyone else in this situation should or shouldn’t do without knowing more information or about the overall dynamic in the home setting-especially since I’m getting your take on this but not his. The one thing I will say is that wrinkling his clothes and walking out was next-level needless immaturity and pettiness. Leave that stuff out of it when trying to make your point next time. And for future reference, if you enter into another possible blended family situation, it would definitely be a good idea to discuss expectations surrounding the nature of relationships between you and your significant other with each other’s children and any financial expectations you BOTH have in the relationship so that you don’t find out too late and end up in a situation like this one-where the kids are likely the only ones really getting hurt in all of this.
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