When my mother-in-law moved in, she refused to lift a finger, claiming she was just a “guest” in our home.
Instead of kicking her out, I got creative and gave her the full VIP treatment until she couldn’t take it anymore.
I never expected my mother-in-law to be a neat freak, but I also didn’t expect to become her personal maid.
When Jason told me his mom, Linda, had sold her condo and needed a place to stay “for a little while,” I hesitated. The last time we spent more than a weekend together, she had criticized everything from my cooking to the way I folded towels.
“Just until she figures things out,” Jason promised, like that made it any better.
“How long is ‘a little while’?” I asked, already regretting the conversation.
He shrugged. “A couple of weeks?
Maybe a month?”
I sighed, knowing I was going to regret this. “Fine. But we need ground rules.”
“Of course,” Jason agreed without hesitation, which was mistake number one—thinking he would help enforce anything.
Linda moved in the following weekend with three suitcases, a collection of houseplants, and zero respect for personal space.
At first, I convinced myself it wouldn’t be so bad.
She unpacked, filled my kitchen with organic tea she never drank, and made passive-aggressive comments about how “young people these days” relied too much on microwaves instead of “real cooking.”
By the second week, it became painfully clear that Linda was not just a temporary guest. She was a full-time problem.
She left dirty dishes on the table, promising to rinse them later, but later never came. My bathroom mirror was constantly smeared with makeup and fingerprints, a daily reminder that she had no intention of wiping anything down.
Laundry?
Oh, she didn’t do her own. Instead, she casually tossed her clothes into my hamper, as if I was just dying to wash her sweatpants along with my work blouses.
I tried to be nice about it.
“Hey, Linda, do you mind tossing your towel in the hamper?”
She gave me a sweet, clueless smile. “Oh, honey, I’m just a guest!
You wouldn’t ask a guest to do chores, would you?”
A guest. In the home I paid for.
Meanwhile, Jason was absolutely useless.
“She’s my mom, babe,” he said when I vented to him. “Can’t we just let her be comfortable?”
Comfortable.
She was living like royalty while I ran around cleaning up after two adults.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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