For once, I wasn’t rushing around trying to meet someone else’s unrealistic expectations. I texted him after a while: “Still at the store. Traffic’s wild .” When I came home late the chaos was glorious. Screaming kids, half-cleaned rooms, a burnt frozen pizza on the table, and my frazzled husband desperately trying to make store-bought cheesecake look fancy. His face when he saw me? Priceless. “Where have you been?” he gasped.
I poured a glass of wine, sat down, and said sweetly, “You told me to go to the store. So I went.” That night, I didn’t lift a finger. His mom looked judgmental, but I didn’t care. It was the first time I didn’t run myself ragged for someone else’s plans. Later, he tried to fight. “You embarrassed me,” he snapped. “You dumped everything on me again and expected a thank-you,” I told him. “This isn’t a partnership it’s a job I didn’t apply for.” To my surprise, the next morning, he cleaned the kitchen. By himself. A few weeks later, he asked if we could plan the next family visit together. It wasn’t perfect, but it was a start. And since that day? He hasn’t pulled the last-minute hosting stunt once. Lesson learned.