My Kids Called Her “Mommy Sarah”—Until My Ex Heard What She Said Behind My Back

My kids started calling my ex’s wife “Mommy Sarah.” My 6-year-old trembled: “She yells if we don’t.” When I confronted her, she laughed: “Face it—I’m their real mother now.” My ex stayed silent. That night, he came over and said firmly, “If you ever feel disrespected…”

I looked at him, thinking he was finally going to defend me. Maybe tell me he didn’t know she was acting like that.

But no—he just nodded, eyes low. “If you ever feel disrespected, just tell me. I’ll talk to her.” Then he turned around and left.

I stood at the doorway for a while, stunned. That was it? Talk to her?

Like this wasn’t emotional abuse aimed at our kids and me? Look, I’m not bitter about the divorce. We were better apart than we ever were together.

We split three years ago, agreed on joint custody, and tried to keep it peaceful. For the first year, it kinda was. Then came Sarah.

She was all smiles at first. Too smiley, honestly. That kind of bless your heart sweetness that’s mostly sugar-coated condescension.

At first, the kids came home saying things like, “Sarah makes the best lasagna!” or “Sarah buys us gifts on Wednesdays!” I didn’t care. I mean, good for them. I want them loved and safe.

But it changed gradually. Like when my youngest, Mira, stopped calling me “Mommy” and started just saying “Mom.” Not a huge deal, but it stung. Then my 8-year-old, Rafid, started correcting me on how I packed their lunch.

“That’s not how Sarah does it.”

Fine, I told myself. Let it go. Co-parenting is hard.

No one writes a manual for how to deal with a bonus mom who’s trying to play lead. But then came the big one. Mira whispered to me after bath time, tugging her towel tight around her tiny shoulders, “We have to call her Mommy Sarah.

She yells if we don’t.”

I stopped brushing her hair mid-stroke. “What kind of yelling?”

She winced. “Like big voice yelling.

Like scary yelling.”

My stomach dropped. I didn’t want to put words in her mouth, but I asked, “Does she scare you, Mira?”

Mira didn’t answer. She just looked at the floor and picked at her thumb.

I texted my ex right then: We need to talk. Urgently. He agreed to drop by that night after dinner.

I didn’t even wait for pleasantries. As soon as the kids went to bed, I told him everything. How Mira was trembling.

How the kids were acting like they had two mothers and I was the faded one. How “Mommy Sarah” was something they were told to say, not something that came from love. He listened.

Quietly. Too quietly. And then he gave me that line: “If you ever feel disrespected… just let me know.”

I nearly threw the remote at his head.

I didn’t, but the thought helped me breathe through the fury. The next week, I kept things civil. The kids went back to their dad’s on Thursday.

I reminded them, as always, to be kind, to speak up if something felt wrong. I hugged Mira extra tight. But the next day, Mira FaceTimed me from the bathroom.

Bathroom. Whispering. “Mama,” she whispered, “Mommy Sarah said you were lazy and that’s why Daddy left.”

My hand clamped my mouth.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *