I Skipped My Son’s Wedding—and Spent the Entire Day With His Ex-Wife.

My 25-year-old son married a sweet 23-year-old girl named Tina. In the beginning, everything looked perfect. They were young, hopeful, building a little life together.

When their baby arrived—a beautiful, bright-eyed boy—I thought their love would only grow stronger. But then the cracks started to show. Slowly, almost casually, Tina began mentioning my son’s infidelity in conversation.

At first I thought she was joking, or maybe misunderstanding something. But the more she spoke, the clearer it became: my son had cheated on her. Not once, but several times.

And she had proof. I felt my face burn with shame. That was not how I raised him.

I confronted Tina, apologized to her, and even told her honestly, “If you ever want to leave him, I’ll support you. You deserve better.”

But Tina, gentle to a fault, forgave him. Over and over.

I couldn’t understand why. She loved him deeply, I suppose. Or maybe she hoped he would change for the sake of their newborn.

Then, months later, the phone rang. It was my son—calm, casual, even cheerful. He told me he was filing for divorce.

He had found someone new, someone he claimed was “a better fit.” Tina was left alone with a one-year-old, scraping by in a tiny rented room, working every spare moment just to keep going. I wasn’t prepared for what came next. My son called again—this time to invite us to his wedding.

I asked him why he had cheated on Tina in the first place. He actually laughed. “Well, Tina is great,” he said lightly, “but I deserve someone better.”

The cruelty, the arrogance—something inside me shattered.

I hung up without another word. On the day of his wedding, my husband and I drove somewhere else entirely: to Tina’s doorstep. She answered holding her crying baby, her face pale with exhaustion.

The room she rented was old, cramped, and unbearably quiet except for the baby’s wails. I rolled up my sleeves, helped her with chores, rocked the baby to sleep, and gave her a moment to rest. I brought cookies and cake—small comforts, but sincere.

When my son called demanding to know where we were, I said simply, “I’m at your ex-wife’s house. You were a terrible husband, and I’m ashamed of you.”

He hung up, furious. He hasn’t spoken to us since.

Sometimes I wonder if I overreacted. But then I look at Tina—tired, hurting, but still trying her best—and I think… maybe I didn’t react enough.

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