When I first decided to be a stay-at-home mom, I knew it wasn’t going to be easy. I had worked before, and I knew what professional stress looked like, but I also knew my children needed me. Three kids under the age of seven meant endless feedings, diaper changes, school runs, nap schedules, tantrums, scraped knees, and mountains of laundry that somehow multiplied overnight.
My husband, Mark, and I had talked it through when we decided I’d leave my job after our second child was born. He earned enough for us to get by, though not extravagantly, and I took pride in running the household while raising our kids. For years, I thought we were on the same page.
But something shifted in Mark about a year after our youngest was born. He started making little comments about money. At first, it was subtle—things like, “Must be nice not having to wake up early for work,” or “Wish I could just stay home all day.”
I brushed them off, thinking he was joking.
But the jokes turned sharper. “You don’t understand how stressful my job is,” he’d say. “You get to sit around with the kids while I keep a roof over our heads.”
Sit around?
That stung. Anyone who’s ever spent a single day with three kids knows it’s anything but sitting around. Still, I bit my tongue, telling myself he was just tired, stressed, maybe not thinking clearly.
But the comments piled up until one night, after a long day where two kids had fevers and the baby refused to nap, Mark came home, dropped his briefcase on the floor, and exploded. “This is ridiculous,” he snapped when he saw dishes piled in the sink and toys scattered across the living room. “What do you do all day, Maddy?
Seriously. You’ve let yourself turn into a parasite. I work, I pay for everything, and you can’t even keep the house clean.”
The word “parasite” hit me like a slap.
I felt heat rise in my chest, tears sting my eyes, but I didn’t cry. Not in front of him. Instead, I went silent, cleaned up what I could, and tucked the kids into bed that night with a smile on my face they didn’t know was fake.
But inside, something in me hardened. Over the next few days, Mark kept pressing. “You need to get a job,” he said.
“And don’t think that means you’ll stop taking care of the kids and house. Millions of women work and still do everything at home. Why should you be any different?
You’re not special, Maddy.”
I wanted to scream at him that I was already working—unpaid, unseen work, but work nonetheless. That taking care of three kids, keeping them fed, clothed, alive, and somewhat sane was a full-time job and then some. But he wouldn’t listen.
He had built this narrative in his head that I was lazy, freeloading off him, and the more he believed it, the more careless he became with his words. So, I came up with an idea. Not revenge exactly, but a reality check.
If Mark thought being a stay-at-home parent was so easy, he was about to find out for himself. One Friday evening, when he got home from work, I told him I had signed up for a weekend seminar for a “job training course.” I made it sound vague but important. “It’s a full weekend, so I’ll need you to watch the kids,” I said.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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