My fiancé’s parents had always been polite to me, but I could sense the quiet disapproval simmering just beneath the surface from the very beginning. They were the kind of couple who seemed more concerned with appearances than with anything genuine, and in their eyes, I didn’t quite fit the mold of the perfect daughter-in-law. Their son, Marcus, and I had been together for almost three years when he proposed.
We met at work—ironically, something his parents would later come to resent. I worked in a fast-paced consulting firm, handling corporate accounts that demanded both my time and brainpower. Marcus was also successful, but he worked in a mid-level managerial role in his father’s company.
His career was solid, but it didn’t pay as much as mine. That fact didn’t matter to Marcus. He was proud of me, proud of what I did, proud of the recognition I had earned in my industry.
But to his parents, it was an affront. To them, a man was supposed to out-earn his wife, to be the provider, the breadwinner. Anything less meant weakness, humiliation, even.
They never said it directly to my face at first, but the way his mother pursed her lips whenever the topic of my job came up, or the subtle digs his father made about women “burning themselves out climbing ladders they didn’t belong on,” told me everything I needed to know. I tried not to let it bother me. After all, Marcus loved me.
He wasn’t his parents. But their expectations eventually caught up with me the moment wedding plans began. One Sunday afternoon, Marcus invited me over for lunch with his family.
It was one of those overly polished affairs his mother liked to host, with silver polished to a mirror shine and dishes served on porcelain so delicate I was afraid to breathe too close to it. About halfway through the meal, his mother dabbed the corner of her lips with a napkin and cleared her throat in that deliberate way that signaled she had something important to say. “So,” she began, glancing at Marcus and then turning her attention to me, “with the wedding coming up, we should discuss your plans after marriage.”
I looked at her curiously.
“Plans?”
“Yes,” she said smoothly, “your career, of course. We all know you’ve been… very dedicated to your job.” She paused as if the word “dedicated” was an insult. “But once you’re married, things will be different.
Marcus will be providing for you, and as his wife, your priority should be supporting him, caring for the household, and preparing for children. That’s how it should be.”
Marcus immediately set down his fork. “Mother—”
But she held up her hand.
“No, Marcus, let me finish. We’ve talked about this, haven’t we?” She looked at him sternly before turning back to me. “It doesn’t reflect well on a man when his wife is out working long hours and earning more than he does.
People talk, whether you like it or not. For Marcus’s sake, you should quit your job once you’re married.”
The silence that followed was suffocating. I glanced at Marcus, whose jaw had tightened, but he didn’t speak.
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