I spent years being dismissed and belittled while keeping our home and family running. My husband loved to joke that I “did nothing all day,” and after a while, it stopped being a joke. It became a label, a punchline that followed me from breakfast to bedtime.
He didn’t see what I did, or maybe he just didn’t want to. For twelve years, I’d been the one holding everything together. I woke before sunrise, packed lunches for our two kids, got them ready for school, handled bills, cleaned the house, did laundry, managed appointments, bought groceries, cooked dinner, and made sure every birthday, recital, and soccer game went off without a hitch.
And still, every evening when my husband walked through the door from work, he’d look around like he was entering a hotel. He’d toss his jacket on the couch, his shoes in the hallway, and ask, “So, what did you do all day?”
The words hit harder each time. At first, I tried to laugh it off.
I’d say something like, “Oh, you know, just the usual saving the world, one load of laundry at a time.” But deep down, the comment stung. It made me feel invisible. Like my work, my exhaustion, and my quiet sacrifices didn’t count because I didn’t bring home a paycheck.
His name was Paul. When we first married, he was kind, thoughtful, and even. He’d hold my hand in public, leave little notes in my lunch bag, and tell me I made him proud.
But somewhere along the way, something changed. Maybe it was when he got promoted at work and started earning more. Maybe it was when I stopped working after our second child was born and my world shrank to the size of our house.
Whatever it was, his respect faded slowly, like a candle burning out. He’d come home tired, and instead of greeting me or the kids, he’d sigh and complain about how I “had it easy.”
“Must be nice,” he’d say, pouring himself a drink, “sitting at home while I deal with real work all day.”
“Real work,” he said, as though mine wasn’t. I tried talking to him about it once.
I told him I felt unappreciated, that his jokes were hurtful. He’d just smirked. “Oh, come on.
You’re too sensitive. I’m just teasing.”
But it wasn’t teasing. It was contempt, disguised as humor.
The worst part was that our kids started to echo him. Our ten-year-old, Lucas, once said, “Mom, why don’t you get a job like Dad?” He hadn’t meant it cruelly, but the words cut me open all the same. It was a slow unraveling after that of me, of our marriage, of everything I thought I was.
Most days, I felt like I was running a marathon that never ended. I’d wake up exhausted and go to bed even more so. The laundry piled up faster than I could fold it.
The kids had different schedules that never aligned. The bills kept coming. My back hurt constantly, my hands ached, my head throbbed, but I pushed through because that’s what mothers do.
Then came the night that changed everything. It was late past midnight, and I was standing in the kitchen, trying to scrub burnt sauce off a pan. Paul was sitting in the living room watching TV, beer in hand.
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