I had been divorced from Matt for two years. Life had moved on—or so I thought. Then his new wife, Stephanie, decided to send me a bill for everything she thought I’d “broken” in Matt’s life.
I wasn’t paying a cent. But I did send her a response she’d never forget.
After our divorce, I was finally enjoying my peaceful, drama-free life. Looking back, it was clear why our marriage failed. I wanted a partner. Matt wanted… a mom.
When we first dated, he seemed perfect—organized, responsible, charming. I still remember being impressed by his spotless apartment. “Wow, you’re really tidy,” I had said.
Matt grinned. “I try to keep things neat. It’s just who I am.”
If only I had known.
Once we got married, that illusion shattered. The first sign? His wet towel on the floor.
“Hey, Matt, don’t forget your towel,” I reminded him, laughing.
“Sorry, babe,” he said. “I’ll be more careful.”
Spoiler: He wasn’t.
Soon, it wasn’t just towels. It was dishes, laundry, unfinished “projects.” I became his personal assistant—scheduling appointments, reminding him to call his mom, even rewriting his resume because he couldn’t be bothered.
Then he lost his job.
“They were too strict anyway,” he shrugged. “I’ll find something better.”
He didn’t. Instead, he started a “side hustle” that barely covered his snack budget while I paid all the bills.
One night, after cleaning up yet another mess, I found myself Googling “how to encourage a grown man to be responsible” at 2 a.m. That’s when it hit me—I wasn’t his wife. I was his mother.
It was over after that.
Matt quickly remarried a woman named Stephanie. And Stephanie? She was… a character.
The only real interaction we had was before their wedding, when she called to ask for old photos of me and Matt for their wedding slideshow.
“Uh… what?” I asked.
“Oh! And if you could share details about what he likes—his favorite meals, hobbies—it would really help me personalize my vows!”
Yeah, no.
The wedding, from what I heard, was a spectacle of pettiness. The maid of honor’s speech? A dig at me. The slideshow? A dramatic before and after of Matt’s life—gray and lifeless with me, colorful and happy with her.
I rolled my eyes and moved on. Until, a month ago, I got an email:
Subject: Invoice for Outstanding Expenses
Stephanie had billed me for over $5,000, including:
$300 for Matt’s eye doctor visit—“Because you didn’t notice his vision was deteriorating.”
$2,500 for a new wardrobe—“To undo years of neglect.”
$200 for therapy—“To heal from emotional damage.”
$500 for a fitness coach—“To rebuild his self-esteem.”
$1,000 for a new mattress—“Because the one you bought gave him back pain.”
$100 for a meal-planning course—“Because he only learned to eat properly after meeting me.”
She even ended with: “I’ve invested in fixing him. It’s only fair you contribute.”
I was speechless. Who does this?!
At first, I drafted a furious response. Then I thought, No, this calls for something better.
“Subject: Response to Invoice for Outstanding Expenses
Dear Stephanie,
Thank you for your email—it gave me quite the laugh! However, I noticed you forgot a few expenses, so I’ve prepared my own counter-invoice:
$10,000 for managing all household responsibilities while Matt played video games for five years.
$15,000 for emotional labor—reminding him to call his mom, go to the dentist, and pay his bills.
$5,000 for lost brain cells from listening to his terrible business ideas (including an app that matched people based on their favorite pizza toppings).
Total: $30,000.
Payable in full by next Friday.
Warm regards,
Your predecessor”
I hit send. And for fun, I CC’d a few mutual friends.
Within hours, my phone blew up.
“Emma, this is legendary.”
“I’m framing this and putting it in my kitchen.”
Stephanie lost it, trying to justify herself. But the more she talked, the worse she sounded.
Eventually, Matt called. “Emma… I’m sorry. I had no idea she’d do that.”
It was the first apology I’d ever gotten from him.
“Matt,” I said, “it’s fine. Just make sure you pay that invoice.”
The cherry on top?
A few weeks later, at a party, someone asked Matt if he ever paid me back for all the emotional labor.
He turned bright red and left early.
Now, anytime Stephanie’s name comes up, someone inevitably says: “Oh, you mean the one with the bill?”
And honestly? I regret nothing.