When my husband Ethan walked through the door that Sunday afternoon, something felt strange right away. His steps were stiff, his face tight, like he had practiced what he was about to say. And when he finally opened his mouth, I was stunned.
“My mom and I talked,” he said slowly, like he was delivering a carefully prepared speech. “And we’ve decided you should quit your job.”
I blinked. “What?”
He nodded like it made perfect sense.
“It’s for the best.”
At first, I thought it was a joke. A weird, outdated, totally ridiculous joke. But then I looked at his face—serious, determined—and I realized he meant it.
Worse, he believed it. Ethan and his mother had decided, without even talking to me, that my job wasn’t important. That I should give up everything I worked for and become their personal housekeeper instead.
We had been married for two years. Things had been mostly good. We had a nice home, good jobs, and a life that ran on routine.
I worked as a financial consultant, and I loved my job. It paid well, gave me freedom, and made me feel proud of myself. But there was one constant headache—my mother-in-law, Diane.
Diane had opinions about everything. What I should cook, how I should dress, when we should have kids, and of course, how I should “focus on family, not work.”
And Ethan? Well, Ethan was a mama’s boy to the core.
If Diane said the sky was green, Ethan would probably buy green-tinted glasses. I had learned how to deal with her over time. Pick my battles, dodge her comments, and when needed—fight back with sweetness and sarcasm.
Like last Thanksgiving. Diane had loudly told everyone at the table, “A wife should clean her own home, dear. Not rely on strangers.”
I was about to argue when Ethan nodded and said, “She has a point, Sophia.”
I took a deep breath, smiled sweetly, and said, “You’re right, Diane.
That’s why I think Ethan should do all the deep cleaning. I mean, if a clean house is so important, it should be a shared job, right?”
Diane’s face twisted like she’d just bitten a lemon. Ethan looked like he wanted to disappear under the table.
That shut down the conversation fast. That was how I handled them. Calm, clever, and with a smile.
But this time? This wasn’t about a vacuum cleaner or a roast recipe. This was war.