The caller ID showed my ex-husband’s name, which usually meant the conversation would be about something routine involving our son. Since we rarely spoke otherwise, I answered expecting a quick, practical discussion. Instead, his request left me stunned. In a calm voice, he said he needed four months off from paying child support. There was a brief pause before he explained why. His wife wanted them to take their daughter to Disney, and he needed time to save for the trip. For a moment, I genuinely thought I had misunderstood what he had said.
I sat there holding the phone, trying to process the logic behind his request. He wasn’t asking for help because he had lost his job or faced an emergency. He simply wanted to stop contributing to our son’s support so he could afford a vacation. The idea felt surreal. Child support is meant to provide stability and meet the everyday needs of a child, not to be paused whenever something more exciting appears.
What struck me most was the casual way he spoke about it. To him, it seemed like a simple adjustment, as though parenting responsibilities could be postponed. Meanwhile, our son’s life continued as usual, with school expenses, groceries, clothing, and medical appointments that don’t disappear just because someone wants to save money for a trip.
The more I thought about it, the clearer it became that he viewed these responsibilities very differently than I did. For him, a theme park vacation felt urgent enough to justify putting everything else aside. But raising a child doesn’t come with a pause button. The daily needs and care required to support a child continue regardless of anyone’s travel plans.
Part of me wanted to argue or remind him of what child support actually represents. Another part of me wanted to express just how unreasonable his request sounded. Yet instead of reacting with anger, I surprised even myself with a very simple response.
I quietly said, “Okay,” and ended the call without another word. There was no lecture and no confrontation. But later that evening, I made a decision. If he truly believed that supporting his son could be paused for four months, then it was time for him to face the reality of what raising a child actually requires.