When my wife, Laura, told me to move out of the house for a few weeks and “abandon” our three-year-old daughter, I honestly thought she was joking. The request came out of nowhere, at least, that’s how it felt to me. It was a quiet Sunday morning.
Sunlight streamed through the curtains, and the smell of pancakes filled the kitchen. I was sitting at the table, helping our daughter, Grace, pour syrup onto her plate, while Laura moved around the kitchen with unusual silence. Normally, she would hum a tune or make small talk, but that morning, she just seemed… distant.
“Daddy, can we go to the park later?” Grace looked up at me, her bright brown eyes melting my heart as always. “Of course, sweetheart,” I said, wiping a bit of syrup off her cheek. “We’ll bring your scooter too.”
Laura set her coffee cup down on the table a bit too hard.
The clink startled Grace, and both of us looked up at her. “Actually, I wanted to talk about that,” Laura said evenly, her tone cool and detached. “About how much time do you spend with Grace?”
I turned to Grace and said gently, “Sweetheart, why don’t you go play in your room for a bit, okay?”
She hesitated, looking between us with worried eyes before slowly walking to her room.
Once the door closed, I frowned and faced Laura. “What do you mean? I don’t spend *too much* time with her.
I just—”
She cut me off. “I think it’s a problem. She’s… too attached to you.”
Those words hit me like a slap.
“Too attached? Laura she’s three years old. Of course, she’s supposed to be attached to us—”
“To you,” she interrupted.
“Not to us. To you.”
There was a long silence. Grace, sensing the tension, started focusing on her pancakes again, swinging her little legs under the chair.
That was when Laura said it. “I want you to move out for a few weeks.”
I stared at her, completely dumbfounded. “What?”
“I just need some time with Grace.
Alone. To… bond,” she said, folding her arms tightly. “You’ve always been the one she runs to.
The one she asks for. The one she listens to. And it’s making me feel like I’m not her mother at all.”
I was too stunned to respond.
How was I supposed to process that? My wife wanted me, her husband, to leave our home so she could learn how to be closer to our daughter. At first, I thought she was overreacting, maybe even joking.
But when she looked me dead in the eyes, I realized she was serious. “You want me to leave?” I said slowly. “Like… actually move out?”
“For a few weeks,” she said again.
“Just so Grace and I can have time together. Without you overshadowing everything.”
I opened my mouth to protest, but then I saw the way her hands were trembling. Laura wasn’t angry; she was hurt.
Deeply. And suddenly, I understood a little better. Ever since Grace was born, she’d been a daddy’s girl.
I never intended for that to happen; it just did. I worked from home as a freelance designer, while Laura worked full-time as a nurse. That meant I was the one feeding Grace, playing with her, putting her down for naps.
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