For 25 years, Doris poured her heart into her family through her cooking. But when her meals began vanishing from the fridge without a trace, she was baffled.
One evening, she came home early and caught the culprit red-handed, sparking events that made her walk away from everything she knew.
You don’t expect your husband of 25 years to betray you. Not in the grand, dramatic way movies show — no secret mistresses or offshore bank accounts — but in the quiet, thoughtless ways that eat away at trust like rust on metal.
For me, it started with the fridge.
Cooking has always been my love language. Our kids, Ellie and Jonah, grew up with home-cooked meals nearly every night.
Even when I worked late shifts at the hospital, I’d find joy in filling the fridge with dishes they loved: casseroles, pasta, soups, and stews.
“Mom, how do you do it?” Ellie used to ask, perched on the kitchen counter.
“Working all those crazy hours and still cooking like this?”
“Love, sweetie,” I’d say, stirring the pot of her favorite beef stew. “It’s all about love.”
When the kids moved out, I thought my work in the kitchen would slow down, but it didn’t.
I still cooked with the same enthusiasm, pouring hours into meals for my husband Randy and me.
But somewhere along the way, something shifted.
Every time I came home, the fridge looked like a crime scene.
Empty shelves.
Dirty containers abandoned on the counter.
Meals that should’ve lasted us a week were gone in days.
“Randy,” I asked one night, exhaustion weighing down my voice, “where does all the food go?”
He shrugged without looking up from his phone.
“I was really hungry.”
“Hungry?” I gestured at the sink overflowing with dirty dishes. “Hungry enough to eat a lasagna, two soups, and an entire casserole in one day?”
He chuckled. “What can I say?
I’m a growing boy.”
“This isn’t funny, Randy,” I pressed, my hands trembling as I gripped the counter. “Do you have any idea how long it takes to make these meals?”
“Come on, Doris,” he said, finally looking up with that dismissive smile I’d grown to hate. “You love cooking.
It’s YOUR thing.”
His nonchalance stung, but I let it go. I was too tired to argue after a 12-hour shift.
This became our routine. I’d cook; the food would vanish.
His excuses — “I skipped lunch,” “I was stress-eating,” “It’s just so good!”
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