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I was "Evil" about Birthday parties

108 replies

Knifer · 17/05/2022 16:50

I was a stepmother over a decade ago. For 8 years, from age 20 to age 28 to a 10-18 yr old boy, an 8-16 year old girl and a 4-12 year old girl.

Those children lived mostly with me and their dad, sometimes they'd flit to their mums for a few months, but mostly with us. He wasn't a very good dad and she wasn't a very good mum. I knew that about her but it wasn't so blatant with him until I was well and truly trapped.

Because of my own experience with a stepparent hating the children of the marriage when I was little, I tried my best for these kids even though I was little more than a kid myself and certainly closer to a sister in age than their mum. Despite this I cooked and cleaned and washed and shopped, clothed and provided makeup and cool shoes and music lessons and instruments and all the things they'd never have been able to do or have if I hadn't worked my arse off to provide them. I spent hours waiting outside counselling sessions for two of them, I drove them to their mums, I even paid their mum to have them when she had spent all her money on other stuff and couldn't feed them. I bought all the birthday and Christmas presents, and I made every birthday cake, exactly how they wanted. Did all the typical stuff like chores for pocket money, taught them to cook and bake, coached two of them through their GCSEs. I genuinely do feel I went far above and far beyond what was expected of me for these children.

BUT. I never did birthday parties. Two reasons. One- I couldn't afford them what with having 3 fully grown kids to support with zero maintenance from the other parent. Two- I felt that their PARENTS should do that, they were their kids, not mine, and I did everything I could do to make sure they were clean, fed, clothed and housed and that their mental health was taken care of. But their parents never pulled their fingers out of their lazy arses and did it. I would let them have friends over for tea or for a sleepover and when the older two were teens I paid for them and a couple of friends to go to the cinema and McDonald's.

Despite everything I did, they were vile to me. I tried not to take it to heart, they had a hard and very traumatic upbringing with their parents- more so than I realised since I was pretty much a kid being lovebombed by their dad and duped into sticking around. But yes, they were vile to me in so many ways, and when me and their dad split up, they said they never wanted to speak to me again for "using" their unemployed, deadbeat father, and none of them have contacted me for more than six years, which has been quite blissful! But today, I got a "Facebook user" message in my inbox, "hi skanky bitch! We saw your son's party pictures on Instagram. Funny how you can do parties for him, but never did for your stepchildren but I guess we weren't worth the money. You have to be a special kind of evil to never give a party to a child."

I imagine this is from the middle one. Who would be 28 now. I'm not usually bothered by nastiness from that direction but this really does upset me. I went without for 8 years and sacrificed so much to make them feel they had the same as anyone else because their parents wouldn't, and they repaid me with misery upon misery which necessitated 3 years of psychotherapy to overcome. And now, because I only had what my job paid me in the early part of the century instead of a magic money tree, some grown woman has messaged me just to be horrible to me. For never arranging and paying for an actual party for her or her siblings when she had two parents who claimed benefits I didn't know existed in order to look after their children. 😡😡

I don't think there's any point to this except to get it off my chest

OP posts:
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anon12345anon · 17/05/2022 16:53

Can't you reply "what did your mum and dad say when you asked them about it?"
Flowers
(then block them)...... Apple's not fallen from the tree, eh?

PBJTime · 17/05/2022 16:55

I would reply: and why haven't you taken this up with your actual parents? Why was it my responsibility when all my money went on clothing, feeding, running you about etc.

Sounds like they got their attitudes from their parents please don't let it bother you some people are just never happy in life.

AntarcticTern · 17/05/2022 16:55

I'm so sorry to hear this OP. That's an awful message to receive, I'm not surprised you are upset. I hope you are in a nicer relationship now.

Glenthebattleostrich · 17/05/2022 16:56

I'm sorry but I would absolutely be responding with what you have put here. And starting it with Oy ungrateful brat ...

OuttaBabylon · 17/05/2022 16:58

Agree with anon. For any of them to do this is plain out of order. You can't win, but you can retort and block! If anyone comes along to suggest you are any way in the wrong, retort and block them too. You sound like you were the only sensible adult in their lives.

Changes17 · 17/05/2022 16:59

I think I'd say what you've said here. Unless you really don't want to for another reason. In which case, just a short message? Or ignore? I think all perfectly valid responses.

bert3400 · 17/05/2022 17:01

I would honestly respond quoting your whole OP then block them. They need to be told what you have done for them but don't engage any further. Let them read what you have told us and let them feel guilty. I'm sorry you have had to deal with this, my xH is a deadbeat dad also.

GarlicGnocchi · 17/05/2022 17:02

anon12345anon · 17/05/2022 16:53

Can't you reply "what did your mum and dad say when you asked them about it?"
Flowers
(then block them)...... Apple's not fallen from the tree, eh?

Yes this sounds good to me. I had a similar but much minor discussion with a DSC about this after arranging a small party for my DC. I told them their father knew exactly where the party box was and was capable of buying a cake so they should take it up with him. They never did though..must be woman's work..

multivac · 17/05/2022 17:03

Please don't respond. There is nothing you can say that will make this better, I promise; they are determined to paint you the villain, and any message from you will feed into their toxic perspective. Block and move on - safe in the knowledge that you were a good stepparent under very difficult circumstances. And concentrate on being the amazing mum I'm sure you are, too. xxx

GarlicGnocchi · 17/05/2022 17:04

Also check your Instagram and Facebook settings

GroggyLegs · 17/05/2022 17:07

This person is damaged.

Agree with others about asking 'what did your mum and dad say when you asked them about it?'.

Or just take comfort that you're out of it, never have to deal with them again & block them all on everything.

Knifer · 17/05/2022 17:24

I thought I had blocked them on everything. I guess there are a couple of friends that used to be "our" friends when I was with my ex and who could potentially be feeding information or taking screenshots. I don't know why they would but I've been surprised by people many times.

I could reply asking this person (who is so obviously her that I don't know why she went to the trouble of a fake account) what the parents of the children did for them and ask whether they have the slightest clue of what I did for them. But I doubt it would be anything to her except a reason to laugh at my expense. This is a woman who, as a teen girl, found it funny to destroy the only thing I bought for myself in six years. I bought a small leather handbag for myself with a pay rise, and she cut the strap with scissors and scratched "skanky bitch" into the leather because I'd bought that for myself and didn't have the money to buy her a concert ticket she suddenly wanted. I had it for two days. She left it on my pillow. When I burst into shocked and miserable tears, she laughed and clapped her hands and said "ohhhhhh, I wish I had a video camera!!" Honestly, had the positions been reversed and I had been the child and they the parents, they'd be in prison for abuse. They were disgustingly cruel people and I still felt sorry for them because I couldn't imagine what they must have been through in their early life that cruelty (and pleasure in it) was a default for them.

OP posts:
rnsaslkih · 17/05/2022 17:34
  1. do not reply - completely ignore

  2. re-think why you put this stuff (or anything at all) on Instagram. Why do you have Instagram? If you wanted a person, such as one of your relatives to have the photo - text it to them privately. Our society has a real problem with social media and your situation really highlights this - three individuals who have nothing but malice for you have pictures of your dc!

  3. forget the 3 step children

ermagerdabear · 17/05/2022 17:40

I'd be a lot ruder than some of these replies are suggesting, tbh. However, you look at it, traumatised upbringing or not, that's a grown woman/man who's messaging you.

In your case, though. I'd just block them, OP and don't given them the satisfaction.They're not worth another thought.

aSofaNearYou · 17/05/2022 17:41

They sound fucking awful OP, I would reply with some home truths but if you don't want to then just know you were an absolute saint to people that didn't deserve it. Just block her.

tsmainsqueeze · 17/05/2022 17:51

Knifer · 17/05/2022 17:24

I thought I had blocked them on everything. I guess there are a couple of friends that used to be "our" friends when I was with my ex and who could potentially be feeding information or taking screenshots. I don't know why they would but I've been surprised by people many times.

I could reply asking this person (who is so obviously her that I don't know why she went to the trouble of a fake account) what the parents of the children did for them and ask whether they have the slightest clue of what I did for them. But I doubt it would be anything to her except a reason to laugh at my expense. This is a woman who, as a teen girl, found it funny to destroy the only thing I bought for myself in six years. I bought a small leather handbag for myself with a pay rise, and she cut the strap with scissors and scratched "skanky bitch" into the leather because I'd bought that for myself and didn't have the money to buy her a concert ticket she suddenly wanted. I had it for two days. She left it on my pillow. When I burst into shocked and miserable tears, she laughed and clapped her hands and said "ohhhhhh, I wish I had a video camera!!" Honestly, had the positions been reversed and I had been the child and they the parents, they'd be in prison for abuse. They were disgustingly cruel people and I still felt sorry for them because I couldn't imagine what they must have been through in their early life that cruelty (and pleasure in it) was a default for them.

Until you said this about your bag i was thinking you should give some sort of eloquent response , but not now .
I have some experience of being a step mother , no way near as much as you , and i think you have been treated appallingly , i don't think you can achieve a thing by replying .
you clearly looked after / out for these horrible people and one day they may realise that ,but i would block them ,blank them and find a way to move on from such a horrible message .
They were very lucky to have you in their lives but sadly sound as feckless as their parents .

MarvellousMay · 17/05/2022 17:52

I wouldn’t engage.

I would tighten up my settings on social media.

GhoulWithADragonTattoo · 17/05/2022 17:54

I'd reply - 'I'd already spent all my money on feeding and clothing you when your parents wouldn't. I had nothing left for parties. Plus you were never polite to me anyway despite me trying.' Then block. Angry

Spaghag · 17/05/2022 17:56

Just to try & see it from the other side:

  1. do the "children" know that every penny spent on their upbringing during those years was yours? Do they even know that their dad claimed benefits & didn't use them to support his own children?

  2. how likely is it that their parents have told them a whole catalogue of lies about you, who did what & who paid for what & who was responsible for any hard times they faced?

It actually really says a lot that they still think you were responsible for providing them with parties (or lots of other things). Despite anything they may say they must have seen you as their mother on some level.

For me, I think if there was a realistic possibility that they didn't know the truth I would have to calmly & carefully lay it all out for them (over a message, not in person) . They are old enough to hear it now. If they absolutely definitely do know then just block, block & block again.

It sounds like they were very lucky to have you in their lives at that time. If you want to arrange a party for your child & share that with friends on social media then you absolutely should be able to.

Youseethethingis1 · 17/05/2022 17:59

Ohhhh I'd not be occupying the high ground on this one.
I'd send something like
"Here's a list of the things I did pay for you ungrateful little c*nt:

  • bullet points

Any complaints, take them up with someone who gives a shit, failing that go talk to your sperm and egg donors"

I probably wouldn't send that but the temptation would be soooo powerful.

User154871 · 17/05/2022 17:59

I would be incredibly blunt in response tbh.

'You had two parents. It was their role to care for you. Despite this, as you were children whom I pitied, I cooked, cleaned, washed and shopped, clothed and provided makeup and cool shoes and music lessons and instruments and all the things you'd never have been able to do or have if I hadn't worked my arse off to provide them. I spent hours waiting outside counselling sessions for you, I drove you to your mum's, I paid your mum to have you when she had spent all her money on other stuff and couldn't feed you. I bought all the birthday and Christmas presents, and I made every birthday cake, exactly how you wanted. Did all the typical stuff like chores for pocket money, taught you to cook and bake, coached two of you through their GCSEs.

You are now an adult. Given you were not my child, you were lucky in getting any support from anyone other than your actual parents. I have forgiven you for your treatment of me since you were children at the time and I hope you manage to mature and realise that the rest of the world owes you nothing.'

Then block. Annoy them by saying you pity them and then refuse to have further contact.

Shelby2010 · 17/05/2022 18:13

I would be tempted to send one of the messages suggested, laying out what you did for these kids. However, how likely is it that she will suddenly have a change of heart or be ashamed of what she wrote? Zilch chance at a guess.

I think whatever you write, she will just revel in the fact that she has ‘got’ to you. And will most likely send even nastier messages. Best to just ignore, pretend it went in the equivalent of junk mail & you never even saw it.

Thank your lucky stars you got out of the situation. 💐

AMegaPint · 17/05/2022 18:14

I would just tell her to fuck off. Maybe add a laughing emoji in. Then block.

Sashimiandhisthunderpaws · 17/05/2022 18:15

Excellent message @User154871

Georgeskitchen · 17/05/2022 18:18

Poor you. Fancy wasting 8 years of your life on these vile specimens. Definitely respond back with a few home truths, sign off saying "enjoy your miserable, bitter little life. I'm so much happier now that I never have to see , hear or smell you, ever again"