My MIL moved in “to help” — but when I came home to find three young women living in my house, folding laundry, flirting, and cutting my husband’s hair, I knew I wasn’t the one being replaced.
I was forty, and that was exactly when my life turned into chaos. I didn’t know how other people managed it, but I felt like the lead in a survival show.
Only, instead of the jungle, I had a kitchen. Instead of predators, three children.
And instead of a team, an ever-growing to-do list.
“Mom, I’m getting a tattoo on my neck. It’ll say ‘Free soul’…” my teenage daughter, Sue, announced without asking for permission.
“And we want a new Lego and no more homework!” shouted my twin boys, wrapping themselves with tape and tossing first-grade books like confetti.
I stood in the middle of the kitchen with a mug of coffee that had long since gone cold, staring at my laptop, where a presentation blinked at me.
I was supposed to submit it the previous Friday.
That one presentation could land me a management position — and with it, a raise we badly needed to stay afloat.
While I worked and juggled three kids, Ross was busy “reinventing himself” with yet another unpaid internship.
“I’m trying, Em.
It’s just temporary. Things will get better soon.”
We had started arguing over everything. The dirty pan.
My tone. His bored “uh-huh” whenever I tried to speak.
The romance had vanished somewhere between our cold dinners and the electric bill.
***
One evening, I was drying the floor after the washing machine had gasped its final breath.
Ross didn’t even look up as he said:
I almost choked. “Linda? The same Linda who once compared my lasagna to cat food?”
“She just wants to help.
Maybe we’ll finally have time for each other. Until I land a job and you get that promotion.”
I closed my eyes.
Knowing Linda, that wasn’t ‘help.’ But I was past the point of pretending I could handle it all.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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