We only invited you out of pity, so don’t stay too long and try not to get in the way.
Those were the first words my daughter-in-law Diana said when she opened the door for my son’s birthday party. Behind her I could see balloons, music, people laughing, a table loaded with expensive food. Fifteen guests… and me, the one person she made clear didn’t belong.
I stood there holding the chocolate cake I’d baked for my son, the same one he’d loved since he was small.
For a second I waited for Robert to appear and say, “Mom, come in, she’s joking.” But he just watched from across the room, wineglass in hand, and pretended not to hear. That was the moment something inside me finally snapped.
I handed Diana the cake, wished my son a quiet “happy birthday,” and left without a scene—no tears, no shouting. In the elevator I caught my reflection: a tired sixty-five-year-old woman with gray hair and a cream sweater she’d picked carefully that morning.
I looked small, but wide awake, as if a part of me that had slept for years had just opened its eyes.
Years of sacrifice
My name is Elellanena. I’m a widow and the mother of one son, Robert. When he was eight, his father died in a car accident and it became just the two of us.
I worked myself raw to give him a decent life—sewing uniforms at a factory from dawn until afternoon, then cleaning offices until late at night.
I’d come home with burning eyes and aching hands, but I always sat with him over homework, kissed his forehead, told him he’d have a better future.
He promised me that one day he’d buy me a big house and I’d never have to work again. I believed every word.
He did well. He studied, graduated with honors, landed a good job in tech.
I thought all those years of sacrifice had been worth it.
Then he met Diana.
The slow erasure
Diana worked as an event coordinator—always perfectly dressed, always with a too-polished smile. From the beginning the way she looked at me made me feel like clutter that needed to be removed.
The disrespect started small: jokes about how old-fashioned I was, insisting I “rest” while she handled things, as if I were useless. Robert would laugh awkwardly and change the subject, never telling her to stop.
Then came the exclusions.
Their first Christmas as a married couple, they hosted a dinner.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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