AITA for telling my ex-husband to stop grovelling and move on?

SeaCorner7385 64 comments

After thirteen years of marriage, a woman found herself standing at the crossroads of love and loneliness.

Her husband, Greg, was a constant presence in absence—always consumed by work, traveling even on weekends, leaving her to grapple with the fading warmth of a relationship overshadowed by neglect and unmet needs.

Though Greg was not a villain, his inability to balance ambition and family shattered the fragile bond they once shared.

When the divorce came, it was not with bitterness but with a quiet resolve to reclaim a life where presence mattered more than promises, and where her children could finally feel the love she fought so hard to protect.

AITA for telling my ex-husband to stop grovelling and move on?
‘AITA for telling my ex-husband to stop grovelling and move on?’

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When the Crowd Speaks, It Echoes Loudly:

Support, sarcasm, and strong words — the replies covered it all. This one definitely got people talking.

The original poster (OP) is experiencing significant frustration due to her ex-husband's persistent attempts to reconcile two years after a divorce finalized due to his absence.

While she acknowledges his heartbreak and attempts to apologize, his inability to respect her es**blished boundaries and new relationship has led her to confront him harshly.

The central conflict lies between the OP's need for final separation and emotional space, and the ex-husband's refusal to accept the divorce terms, often masking his desire for reconciliation under shared parental duties.

Given the OP's clear desire to move forward and the ex-husband's failure to respect boundaries, was the OP justified in her harsh confrontation to enforce separation, or did her strong language cross the line into unnecessarily cruel behavior toward a heartbroken co-parent?

This question forces a debate between a*serting personal boundaries firmly and maintaining civility in co-parenting relationships.