My name is Nancy. I’m 35, a single mom of three — seven, three, and a six-month-old baby. My 74-year-old mother lived with us and helped with the kids. In return, she stayed rent-free. It wasn’t perfect, but it worked. Then she fell. A slip in the kitchen left her in constant pain and unable to care for herself. Overnight, everything changed. I was suddenly juggling three children, a job, and my mother’s full-time care. I was exhausted beyond words.
When she refused to even discuss a nursing home, I asked if she could help financially so I could afford part-time care. It wasn’t about punishment — it was survival.
She exploded.
“I’m your mother — you owe me!”
That night, my seven-year-old ran upstairs shaking.
“Mom! Grandma’s leaving!”
A nursing home van was outside. My mother had arranged everything herself. Movers had already taken her belongings — even the baby’s crib, since she had once bought it.
When I called her in tears, she said coldly,
“This is what you get for being ungrateful.”
Her words crushed me. Not just from anger, but from the fear beneath them — the fear of no longer being needed.
But I had fear too. I couldn’t be a full-time nurse, mother, and provider all at once.
Now the house is quieter. The kids ask when Grandma is coming back. I still don’t know what to say.
And I still wonder — was I wrong to ask for help… or was love never meant to be a debt that never ends?