Being a supportive partner often means stepping up when life gets complicated, but there is a limit to how much responsibility someone should carry for another person’s choices. That line becomes even clearer when children are involved.
The original poster (OP) had been dating her boyfriend for over a year and tried her best to help when his two children visited. During one weekend together, he left for what was supposed to be a quick errand and never came home.
After hours of unanswered calls and worried children asking where their father was, OP made a decision she felt she had no choice but to make. Now her boyfriend says she humiliated him, while others think she protected the kids. Read on to see what Reddit decided.
A woman contacted her boyfriend’s ex after he vanished overnight while she was left caring for his children





















Sometimes the hardest moments in relationships are not caused by one dramatic event, but by the realization that someone else’s responsibilities have quietly been placed on your shoulders. Caring for children, especially when you are not their parent or legal guardian, requires trust, communication, and reliability.
In this situation, the OP was not simply upset that her boyfriend was late coming home. She was placed in a stressful position where she had to protect two children while having no information, authority, or certainty about when their father would return.
The core issue is not just that Chris disappeared for a night. It is the imbalance of responsibility and accountability. The OP willingly supported her boyfriend’s role as a father, but support is different from being treated as a backup caregiver without consent.
When Chris left for “an hour” and became unreachable, the OP was left managing two young children who were worried about their father. Her decision to contact their mother was not necessarily about punishing Chris or exposing him; it was about finding the person who had both the legal responsibility and the ability to step in.
From Chris’s perspective, he may have felt embarrassed that his behavior became visible to his ex-wife, but that embarrassment appears to come from the consequences of his own choices rather than the OP’s actions.
A useful psychological perspective comes from family therapist and author Terry Real, who often discusses the importance of relational responsibility and emotional maturity in partnerships. He explains that healthy relationships require people to recognize how their actions affect others instead of focusing only on their own feelings or intentions.
When someone avoids accountability and shifts blame onto their partner, the relationship can become emotionally unbalanced.
This perspective helps explain why the OP’s choice was understandable. She was not trying to replace Chris as a parent or interfere with his relationship with his ex-wife. She was responding to a situation where the children’s emotional security had become her immediate concern.
A six-year-old and an eight-year-old do not understand adult excuses; they only experience the fear of a missing parent. The OP also had to consider that if something serious had happened to Chris, contacting his co-parent would have been a reasonable step.
The situation also raises a larger question about dating someone with children. A supportive partner can help, but they should not become responsible for fixing the consequences of a parent who fails to show up.
Co-parenting requires reliability from both biological parents, and new partners should not be placed in situations where they must choose between protecting children and protecting an adult’s reputation.
Ultimately, the important issue is not whether the OP “should have called the ex.” It is why she was put in a position where she had to make that decision at all.
Trust is built when people follow through on their responsibilities. When someone disappears and leaves others to handle the fallout, the conversation should focus on accountability rather than blaming the person who stepped in to help.
Check out how the community responded:
These Redditors said OP’s partner did abandon his children despite claiming otherwise




This group urged OP to leave, saying his behavior reveals serious character issues





These commenters questioned why OP stays with someone who repeatedly neglects his parenting responsibilities












Do you think she crossed a boundary by contacting his ex-wife, or did she do exactly what needed to be done?