If you thought soap operas had the market cornered on outrageous plot twists, think again. One Reddit user’s real-life saga could make even the boldest telenovela writer ask, “Too much?”
A 29-year-old woman is still legally married to her estranged husband, “Richard,” who cheated, moved in with his mistress, and even had a child during their marriage. Divorce has been complicated and dragged out for years, thanks to endless court delays and Richard’s crocodile tears about “saving the marriage.”
But just when she thought things couldn’t get more surreal, Richard marched into her workplace with his affair partner’s child and demanded child support. What happened next was equal parts shocking, satisfying, and deeply messy.
Curious how an attempted shakedown turned into an unemployment fiasco? Here’s the full Reddit tea.
One woman’s attempt to move on from an abusive ex took a wild turn when he crashed her workplace, demanding child support for his affair-born child, only to lose his job












OP later edited the post:







Sometimes consequences arrive faster than expected. In this case, OP’s estranged husband, Richard, violated a restraining order by showing up at her workplace demanding “child support” for the child he conceived with his mistress.
When security intervened, the utility company Richard worked for discovered he was in a relationship with his direct subordinate, strictly against company policy. Both were fired. Now OP is being blamed for their unemployment, even though she neither called his employer nor orchestrated the fallout.
From OP’s perspective, she was the target of harassment yet again, blindsided at work. Her motivation has been consistent: maintaining distance and legal protection.
Richard’s motivation was manipulation, using legal loopholes to stall divorce, attempting to blur parental responsibility, and publicly cornering OP for money. The employer’s motivation, however, was straightforward: protect its reputation, enforce workplace rules, and address gross misconduct.
This case highlights a broader issue of workplace harassment and misconduct.
According to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), more than 60% of workers who experience misconduct say it negatively impacts their career, with romantic conflicts between supervisors and subordinates being a common risk factor. When an employee breaches both personal and professional boundaries, employers often act swiftly to protect the organization.
Family law experts also stress the importance of enforcing restraining orders. Dr. T.K. Logan, professor of behavioral science at the University of Kentucky, notes: “When protective orders are enforced consistently, victims are safer and offenders are less likely to reoffend”. Applied here, Richard’s termination wasn’t OP’s revenge, it was the inevitable result of ignoring court orders and workplace rules.
Neutral advice? OP should document every incident, maintain no contact, and lean on the lawyer helping with her divorce to push for finalization. She should not accept guilt for Richard’s job loss, he and his mistress triggered their own consequences. If harassment continues from his family, legal measures like cease-and-desist letters may be warranted.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
These users declared the Redditor is not wrong, emphasizing that Richard’s violation of the restraining order and his mistress’s workplace rule-breaking caused their own firings











This commenters suggested buying the receptionist flowers for handling the situation

In the end, this saga wasn’t about a ring, money, or even divorce, it was about consequences. Richard tried to weaponize the workplace, break a restraining order, and twist reality to his advantage. Instead, he lost the job that supported his new life.
Was OP wrong to stand her ground? Or was this simply life handing Richard a lesson he refused to learn? When it comes to messy exes, how far would you go to enforce boundaries and how would you react if their downfall landed in your lap? Share your takes below.









