International Student Laughs When Friend Says Her Mom Is ‘Exploiting’ Her Dad After Divorce

An international student found herself caught off guard during a relaxed talk about divorced parents that quickly shifted into tension over child support. Her friend pressed her on why her mother accepted payments from her father under Sharia law traditions, despite both parents holding solid jobs and sharing custody equally.

The student reacted by laughing at what struck her as an instant judgment painting her mother as someone taking advantage. Months later the conversation still lingers as she questions whether she should reach out with an apology, especially after her friend took clear offense and fell silent.

A woman laughs off her friend’s assumption that her mom exploited her dad via religious child support rules after divorce.

International Student Laughs When Friend Says Her Mom Is 'Exploiting' Her Dad After Divorce
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for laughing at a friend that said my mother took advantage of my dad after their divorce?'

I (19f) am an international student. I was with a friend recently, and we landed on the topic of parents.

Our parents divorced when we were really young, so this kinda became a venting session for both of us lol.

In my case, my parents divorced when I was 6 and they had shared 50/50 custody of me.

Then we got on the topic of child support, and this was where things got weird.

I’m Muslim, and I was born and raised in a Muslim country with Sharia law.

And under sharia law, it is the fathers that bear the sole financial (key word: financial) responsibility of having children.

So when my parents divorced, although both my parents have good jobs,

and were earning similar amounts at the time of the divorce, my father had to pay my mother child support for the time she would have me.

And my friend thought this was incredibly weird. She asked me why my mother agreed to accept the child support if she didn’t need the money.

The simple answer: my parents are religious. My mother believes that it is my father’s responsibility to financially provide for me, not hers. My father believes the same.

My friend kind of laughs and says it’s easy to be religious in a situation like that when you can get money you don’t need off your ex. I laughed...

She gets pretty offended that I laughed at her and she asked me why. I told her

she doesn’t know anything about my parents but she automatically assumes the worst of my mother.

Honestly, laughing at her was kinder than anything I would’ve said to her at that moment.

She pretty much stops talking to me at that point and now I’m wondering whether I should reach out to make amends.

A simple venting session about divorced parents highlighted how deeply personal beliefs about financial responsibility can collide with outside judgments.

The core issue here revolves around differing views on parental duties after divorce. The young woman described a setup rooted in her Muslim upbringing and Sharia law principles, where fathers hold primary financial responsibility for children, regardless of the mother’s earnings. Both her parents agreed on this as a religious norm, not a loophole for extra cash.

Her friend, however, quickly framed it as the mom exploiting the dad, implying the religious belief was convenient only because money was involved. The student’s laugh came from disbelief at that snap judgment about her family.

From one angle, the friend’s reaction might stem from a more secular or Western lens on equality, where shared incomes could mean shared obligations.

Yet jumping straight to “taking advantage” overlooks the mutual agreement between the parents and the cultural context that frames child support as a father’s duty, not optional charity.

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On the flip side, the student defended her family’s choices fiercely, seeing the comment as disrespectful to their faith and her mom’s character. Laughing might have felt like a light deflection in the moment, but it shut down the conversation.

This situation broadens into larger questions about family dynamics across cultures. In many societies, child support laws aim to prioritize the child’s well-being over strict gender equality in payments.

For instance, U.S. data from the Annie E. Casey Foundation shows that custodial mothers and fathers receive full child support at similar rates (around 46% vs. 43%), but agreements and expectations often reflect income differences and caregiving roles rather than assumptions of exploitation.

Family law experts note that cultural and religious traditions shape how parents view support obligations. One analysis of multicultural family issues on Bremer Whyte Family Law points out that “cultural values inform an individual’s attitude towards marriage and divorce,” and unspoken differences in gender roles or financial expectations can lead to misunderstandings if not discussed with respect.

Neutral advice? A calm follow-up conversation could clarify intentions, something like explaining the religious and legal context without defensiveness might rebuild the bridge. Or, if the friendship feels one-sided in respect, it’s okay to let some space grow.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Some users state that the OP is NTA because the parents’ religious beliefs and custody agreement are their own business and not the friend’s concern.

 

Empress-Delila − NTA. It's your religion and your Father had absolutely zero issue with that.

To her it may seem weird since your mother didn't need it but to you and your parents it's the norm.

Dogmother123 − NTA Your parents have their beliefs. There is no conflict between them.

geekyheart225 − NTA. Your parents' custody and support agreement are none of your friend's business.

Winter_Raisin_591 − NTA, and your friend is reaching. If that is the law (Sharia or not) is it even an option for a woman to say no I don't need...

If your parents held the same belief and your dad didn't feel he was being "taken advantage of", then yeah your friend is creating an issue where it never existed.

 

Many argue that the friend is the one who should apologize, as she insulted the OP’s mother, family, and religion by assuming financial exploitation.

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TheSkyElf − NTA its quite telling that the first thing she thought of was your mother taking advantage of your father -

not that your parents thought it would just be a good thing to put more money into parenting you than necessary.

No, she immediately thought the worst of your mom and insulted the religion in a case where it is favoring the finances of the child.

Also insinuating that the only reason your mother is religious is for money.

Laughing at her wasn't an AH thing to do at all. What is there to make amends for here?

By all means it is her who should be trying to make amends and apologize for what she said about your mother.

She could have tried to find out more about your culture, laws, religion, and family,

but instead she went right to "it's easy to be religious when you can get money"

wy100101 − It's arguable that she is the one who should be making amends. She was out of line IMO. NTA

RebelAlliance05 − NTA it’s lowkey disrespectful to your religion and family for her insinuate

that your mother is taking advantage of your father and claiming “religious purposes”.

I’m sure she’s embarrassed by her actions but a true, respectful friend would have already apologized after that alteration.

Like you said, laughing was the kindest thing you could’ve done at that moment.

[Reddit User] − Why would you? She insulted your family

HappySummerBreeze − She accused your mother of faking her religious beliefs for financial gain… and you think YOU owe HER an apology? Let her go. Nta

Others suggest the friend overreacted and the OP could be the bigger person by explaining cultural differences patiently.

QfromP − Interesting. While, I'm sure sharia law comes with all sorts of nuanced disadvantages,

making the dude automatically financially responsible for all his children is one genius solution to irresponsible s__ - what's more expensive? a condom? or a child?

Anyway. Not what you're asking. I don't think you're TA. But you have an opportunity to share cultural differences.

If you want to be heard/understood, you need to talk to her with patience and with kindness.

Your friend is being silly for not talking to you. But it won't k__l you to be the bigger person.

In the end, this tale shows how one offhand comment can ripple through friendships when culture and family loyalty collide. Do you think the student’s reaction was fair, or should she reach out first?

How would you handle a friend questioning your family’s deeply held beliefs? Share your hot takes below!

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