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Woman sitting at home talking on her phone with a playful expression.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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Breakups have a standard checklist. Return the hoodie, unfollow on social media, delete the photos, move on. Nobody really prepares for the situation where the cleanest exit requires the other person to make a ten-minute phone call they keep forgetting about, and three months later you're still on their phone plan with no end in sight.
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AITA for letting my ex foot the bill for my phone plan?
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Woman walking outdoors while talking on her phone.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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Woman smiling while talking on her phone indoors.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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The original gift was genuinely thoughtful and also slightly maddening in the way that well-intentioned decisions made on someone else's behalf tend to be. Getting surprised with a phone someone else chose, on a plan someone else controls, while already planning to enjoy the process of picking one yourself, is the kind of gesture that requires a lot of gracious reframing to fully appreciate. The reframing happened. The appreciation grew. And then the relationship ended anyway, exactly as the quiet backup plan had always anticipated it might.
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Three months of politely reminding an ex to cancel a phone line is a very specific kind of exhausting. It has all the emotional weight of post-breakup contact with none of the romantic upside. Every billing cycle brings another reminder, another promise, another tomorrow that doesn't materialize. At some point the dynamic stops being about a phone plan and starts feeling like being assigned homework by someone who no longer has any authority to assign homework.
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The practical math here is straightforward. He is actively paying for something every month. She has tried repeatedly to resolve it. The only thing standing between her and full financial independence from this situation is a single phone call that he keeps declining to make. At a certain point continuing to pay for something you were offered, while the other party refuses to take the steps required to end the arrangement, stops being mooching and starts being the natural consequence of someone's own inaction.
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Stopping the reminders makes complete sense. The offer to handle it has been made repeatedly and clearly. The backup plan is ready. The sim card is already purchased. Everything is in place except the one thing that requires his participation, and chasing that down indefinitely is not a reasonable ongoing obligation for either of them.
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