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Teaching My Son What Real Partnership Means

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Six months ago, they had a baby. The birth was tough. My daughter-in-law quit so she could spend more time with the baby.

That’s when things got difficult.

My son stopped helping with chores; he thought since she wasn’t working, she must do everything herself. So, when he moved in with me after the divorce, I decided to teach him a lesson about what it really means to be a partner, a parent, and, frankly, a grown man.

It wasn’t how I pictured things going for him. He was my only child.

I raised him mostly on my own after his dad passed away.

I taught him to cook, to clean, to treat women with respect. Or at least I thought I did. But somewhere along the line, it seems those lessons got lost.

Maybe I was too soft.

Maybe I spoiled him. When he walked through my front door with two duffel bags and a lost look on his face, I didn’t say “I told you so.”

I just gave him a hug and pointed toward the guest room.

I figured I’d give it a few days before I started laying down the law. But I didn’t have to wait long.

By day two, his dirty socks were under the coffee table.

By day three, the sink was full of his cereal bowls. By the end of the week, I was doing his laundry again like he was fifteen. And not once did he say thank you.

Not once did he ask if he could help with dinner.

I wasn’t angry. I was disappointed.

Deeply. This was the same man who used to bring me flowers from the neighbor’s garden when he was five.

The same man who cried when his dog died and who held his grandmother’s hand in hospice.

He had a good heart—somewhere. It just needed waking up. So I made a plan.

A quiet one.

No yelling, no drama. I was going to give him a taste of the life his ex-wife had for the past six months.

And then, maybe, just maybe, he’d understand. The next morning, I left him a note on the fridge: “Out for errands, back at noon.

Dishes need to be done.

Bathroom needs cleaning. Groceries in trunk. Love, Mom.”

When I came back, nothing was done.

Groceries were still sitting in the car.

He was on the couch, Xbox controller in hand, yelling at some stranger online. I said nothing.

Just walked to my room and shut the door. The next morning, same note, different chores.

Same result.

By the third day, I switched tactics. I called up my neighbor, Sandra, who ran a local daycare out of her basement. Asked her if she needed an extra hand for a few weeks.

She laughed and said she always needed hands.

When I told my son he’d be helping at Sandra’s for the next month, he looked at me like I had grown a second head. “Why would I do that?”

“Because I cook your food.

I do your laundry. I give you a roof.

That’s the deal.”

“I didn’t agree to that.”

“You didn’t agree to sit around and mope either.”

He grumbled, but he went.

Probably thought he’d be watching cartoons with toddlers and handing out goldfish crackers. Oh, how wrong he was. Sandra had him changing diapers, wiping noses, picking up toys, and settling nap tantrums.

She worked him.

And every day, when he got home, he looked more and more exhausted. His shoulders slumped, eyes ringed with shadows.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇

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