My husband Greg promised to secure our daughter Ava’s future. Instead, he spent her $45,000 college fund on a rusty 1972 Ford Bronco. That money came from both our families and months of overtime shifts I worked as a nurse. Greg had one job—deposit it in a college fund. But the moment he saw that truck, reason flew out the window.
I came home from a 12-hour shift to find the Bronco in our driveway, its headlight dangling, paint chipped, and Greg grinning. “Surprise!” he said. I was speechless. He’d spent every cent. “It’s an investment,” he argued. “It’ll double in value.” But I saw it clearly—he’d chosen nostalgia over our child’s future.
That night, while he slept, I packed his belongings and loaded them into his precious truck. At sunrise, I told him to leave. “You chose your truck. Now live with it.” He stormed off, stunned, and I stood in the doorway with Ava in my arms, silently swearing she’d never pay for her father’s mistakes.
Three days later, Greg returned. Not with the Bronco, but a receipt. “I sold it,” he said. He’d gotten $38,000 and opened the 529 account. He promised to earn back the missing $7,000. He even wrote apology letters to our families—and one for Ava.
I let him sleep on the couch. No promises. Just effort. Every dollar he earns goes to Ava’s fund. I’m watching, waiting, protecting her.
Because Ava deserves a father who puts her first. And I deserve a partner who never forgets that.