She Refused To Take Her Daughter So Her Ex Could Go On Vacation, Now He Says She Cost Him $1,000

For five years, she has been the flexible one.

The understanding one. The parent who rearranges appointments, cancels plans, and absorbs the chaos when her ex forgets to communicate. Again.

She and her ex-husband share custody of their 9-year-old daughter on a mostly 50/50 schedule. Because of his fly-in, fly-out job, she already takes their daughter a few extra days each month. It works, mostly. They get along. But there has always been one recurring problem. He does not communicate until the very last minute.

And she has always said yes.

Until this time.

When he casually announced that she would be taking their daughter for three weeks starting the next day so he could go on vacation, something finally snapped. She already had appointments booked. She had an overnight trip planned during what was supposed to be her week off. And most of all, she was tired of being treated like an automatic backup plan.

So she said no.

She Refused to Take Her Daughter So Her Ex Could Go on Vacation, Now He Says She Cost Him $1,000
Not the actual photo

Now he says she ruined his holiday and wasted $1,000. Here is how it unfolded.

'AITA for refusing to take my daughter during my ex-husband's week with her so he can go on holiday?'

Okay, some context. My (32F) ex-husband (49M) and I get along well for the most part.

We co-parent our 9 year old daughter on a mostly 50/50 basis with me having her for a few extra days a month due to his fly-in/fly-out schedule for work.

The only areas we b__t heads with are his lack of communication and nutrition when it comes to our daughter.

(The nutrition thing is a pain to deal with but ultimately not the issue at hand here).

Since we've been divorced, about 5 years now, he has consistently forgotten to communicate when he needs me to take her early for him, or on days when it would...

I've raised my concerns with him each time and asked him to give me more than a day or two notice when he needs me to take her, but he...

Because I obviously want my daughter with me as much as possible, I always take her anyway and reschedule any plans I may have made for myself that conflict.

Recently, he and I were talking on the phone and he says to me, 'you know you're taking her for 3 weeks as of tomorrow right?'

I did not. He mentioned that he was thinking about taking holidays in September way back in April, did not say when in September and never brought it up again.

I had appointments booked for my week without her and an overnight trip planned. Out of frustration with him and his pattern of disrespect for me and my time, I...

My thoughts being, if I keep doing this for him he will continue to forget and things will never change. I am a very passive person and he knows this....

He got extremely upset with me, and has demanded that he can not count on me for anything, and that he will no longer help me out when I need...

Keep in mind, he has never taken her for me on his days off or helped out in that way whatsoever for me, so this really doesn't effect me in...

He claims he cancelled his vacation and wasted $1000 on it now because he has no childcare for his week with her.

I understand his frustration with cancelling his vacation. He on the other hand does not understand my frustrations with his lack of communication and has been cold with me since.....

The Pattern That Built the Frustration

Since their divorce five years ago, he has consistently “forgotten” to give proper notice when he needs schedule changes. Sometimes it is a couple of days. Sometimes less. He rarely confirms details in writing. He simply assumes she will accommodate.

And she always has.

Not because she enjoys being inconvenienced, but because she loves having her daughter with her. If the choice is between sticking to her plans or having her child, she chooses her child every time. He knows that.

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This time, though, the situation felt different. Months earlier, back in April, he had vaguely mentioned he might take a holiday in September. No dates. No confirmation. No follow-up.

Then, on a phone call, he dropped it casually: “You know you’re taking her for three weeks as of tomorrow, right?”

She did not know.

And she was done pretending this was acceptable.

Drawing the Line

For once, she did not rearrange her life.

She told him no. Calmly. Firmly.

She explained that she had plans. That she had repeatedly asked for proper notice. That this pattern of last-minute changes was disrespectful of her time. She is not his on-call babysitter. She is a co-parent.

His reaction was explosive. He accused her of being unreliable. Said he could not count on her anymore. Threatened that he would no longer “help her out” when she needed it.

The irony is hard to miss. He has never taken extra days for her. He has never offered flexibility on his own time off. His threat carried no practical weight, only emotional pressure.

He also claimed he had to cancel his vacation and lost $1,000 because she refused.

From his perspective, she ruined something important. From hers, he gambled on her compliance and lost.

The Bigger Question

This is not really about a vacation.

It is about boundaries.

When one parent consistently assumes the other will pick up the slack, it creates a power imbalance. It teaches the unreliable parent that poor planning has no consequences. It also models something troubling for the child, that one parent’s time is more valuable than the other’s.

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Several Redditors pointed out that parenting is not something you take a break from without arranging care well in advance. If a holiday mattered that much to him, he could have confirmed dates months earlier. He could have asked, not informed. He could have secured childcare properly.

Instead, he relied on habit.

And habit finally failed him.

There is also the emotional layer. Some commenters noticed the significant age gap when their daughter was born and questioned whether patterns of control or manipulation might have existed for years. Whether that is true or not, what is clear is that she has historically been the more passive partner. He knows that. She knows that. Breaking that dynamic was never going to be comfortable.

Growth rarely is.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Many called him wildly disrespectful for assuming a three-week schedule change could be announced the day before.

Ordinary-Exam4114 − NTA. I would insist on all of the childcare planning be written out in either text or email from here forward.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Also the age gap when you had your daughter is very concerning.

Why is a 40 year old man chasing after 23 year olds? I’m glad you’re divorced and I’m glad you’re standing up for yourself.

FinalConsequence70 − So, your husband was 40, and you were 23, when you had your child?

Makes me wonder how old you were when you met, because if he wasn't grooming a much younger woman, than I don't know what he was doing.

You're NTA, he's manipulating you now, like he probably has since you met him. Start documenting everything.

Others urged her to put all communication in writing moving forward, possibly even using a co-parenting app to document agreements.

Listen_2learn − INFO: Why isn’t he taking your daughter with him on vacation? !

slugposse − NTA. There are a lot of co-parenting apps you could be using. It would put everything in black and white, and you wouldn't have him trying to charm...

Ma-Hu − NTA. How else is he going to change his ways if you keep letting this slide? And as another commenter says, “Everything in writing well in advance [be...

Mean-Archer391 − One does not take vacation from being a parent. It’s his responsibility according to the schedule. You are not his indentured babysitter.

If it was so important to him, he would have made arrangements in advance, communicate and pay you a stipend perhaps. He is just used to you picking up the...

A few asked why he was not taking his daughter on vacation with him. After all, parenting does not pause for leisure.

Natural_Garbage7674 − NTA. My dad used to do the same thing even though he was only an every second weekend dad. It would get close to school break and mum...

Most of the time he'd say something about actually taking us less because he was going on holiday.

Then he'd get back and tell us about how much fun he had with his wife's family and their kids on their kid oriented holiday. Your ex is a father....

It's unfair to you that he drops these things last minute, but it's even more unfair to your daughter. Watch your daughter for signs that her father is blaming her...

DesertSong-LaLa − NTA -- If he owned a dog he'd put more time securing boarding vs. what he secured for his daughter's care 'starting tomorrow'. ..this is outrageous. What an...

He wasted vacation money because he failed to plan, proactively ask and secure your daughter to be with you when he is scheduled to parent. Relax and indulge in 'me'...

ThingsWithString − NTA. You aren't married to him any more. You don't even have to consider last-minute demands, because you don't owe him anything. A 3-week vacation as of tomorrow?

Wildly disrespectful. Like, sewer rats get more respect than that. Rabid sewer rats. With bad breath. It doesn't matter how frustrated he is; he fucked around and found out.

In the end, this situation is not about punishing an ex or keeping score.

It is about whether co-parenting means cooperation or convenience. She has shown flexibility for years. This time, she chose self-respect.

If he truly lost money, it was not because she refused. It was because he failed to plan.

The harder question is this: should protecting your time and demanding basic communication ever make you the villain? Or is it simply the moment you stop being the default solution to someone else’s poor choices?

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What do you think?

 

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