I always imagined that coming home from college would feel like slipping into a warm bath, a familiar comfort after the relentless churn of lectures, deadlines, and dorm-room chaos. My tiny apartment on campus had thin walls, a mattress that felt like stacked cardboard, and a roommate who set her alarm for five every morning. So a quiet weekend at home sounded like heaven.
I pictured the creak of our old staircase, the faint scent of my mother’s rosemary bread drifting from the kitchen, and the soft hum of the ceiling fan that had been wobbling since I was ten. Home, to me, meant steadiness, something I desperately needed after midterms nearly melted my brain. But the moment I pushed open the front door that Friday evening, dragging my overstuffed suitcase behind me, I knew the weekend wouldn’t be anything like the peaceful retreat I’d fantasized about.
My father, Harold, was sprawled across the couch like an emperor surveying his kingdom. One leg draped over the armrest, remote in hand, a half-empty can of ginger ale sitting precariously on his stomach. He was watching an old basketball game rerun, laughing loudly at plays he had definitely seen before.
Meanwhile, my mother, Marissa, was a blur of movement in the kitchen. The oven timer beeped, the washing machine thudded, and a pan hissed on the stove. A towel hung over her shoulder, her sleeves were rolled up, and her hair stuck in damp wisps to the sides of her face.
Even from the doorway, I could see the fatigue buried in her posture. None of this surprised me. My dad had always embraced the role of “household lounger,” while my mom handled most of the cooking, cleaning, and miscellaneous chores.
I grew up with that dynamic, and though it wasn’t ideal, they seemed to function within it. But I hadn’t even taken two steps inside before something happened that made my blood boil. “Marissa!” my dad called out, his voice booming across the living room.
“You missed a streak on the tile this morning. The light’s hitting it, and it’s pretty obvious. Don’t you ever get tired of being so lazy?”
I froze mid-step.
Lazy? My mom paused, her stirring spoon hovering over the pan. Her shoulders stiffened.
She didn’t turn around, didn’t defend herself. She just lowered her gaze and kept cooking, like she had learned, maybe over years, to absorb his criticism without flinching. But I flinched.
Hard. My mother, who worked three days a week at the community library, who made homemade meals, who cleaned every corner of the house until it sparkled, who planted an herb garden she cared for like a child lazy? My father, who clearly hadn’t moved from the couch in over an hour, dared to call her that?
I felt something sharp twist in my chest. Anger, pure and hot. I swallowed hard, plastered on a smile, and walked into the living room.
“Hey, Dad.”
He glanced at me for half a second. “Jamie! Didn’t hear you come in.” Then he gestured toward the kitchen.
“Your mom’s making your favorite chicken stew. You got lucky this weekend.”
Lucky wasn’t the word I’d have chosen. Dinner that night was stiff and uncomfortable.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇