When I got back home after a tough week away, I figured I’d walk into some calm. Instead, I stepped into my kitchen…
When I got back home after a tough week away, I figured I’d walk into some calm. Instead, I stepped into my kitchen, which was buried under bright bubblegum-pink paint and busy flower wallpaper.
My mother-in-law stood right in the center of it, grinning like she’d done something amazing.
But what really hit me hard wasn’t the wrecked space.
It was how my husband took it all in.
I’ve been married to Bram for three years now, and somewhere along the way from our vows to changing diapers, I stopped noticing when things started going wrong. We used to click so well.
Date nights every Friday, slow Sunday mornings where we’d bicker over whose pancakes were better, and shopping lists stuck on the fridge with doodled hearts in the corners.
But once our lively, tiring, whirlwind twin boys arrived, Bram turned into this guy who shared my roof but felt like a stranger. “Can you grab the wash?” I’d say.
His answer: “I’m tied up, hon.”
“Could you handle feeding the twins so I can hop in the shower?”
“You’re way better at it,” he’d say with a shrug.
Every ask got a dodge, and every call for backup got ignored, like I was out of line for wanting him to step up with his own kids.
The guy who used to bring me flowers on a random Tuesday now couldn’t even scoop up his own socks. But my kitchen?
That spot was still my own. It was my safe place… the one corner where I could just be me.
I’d set money aside for eight months to fix it up.
Eight months of skipping meals out, passing on new outfits, and tucking away every extra buck I could find.
I killed a whole Saturday in the paint store, holding color cards to the light, picking between two off-whites because one seemed too stark and the other a bit too sunny. I picked tiles that brought back my grandma’s cozy, sunny summer home.
The lights cast this soft shine at night that made the whole room feel right.
It wasn’t showy. No prizes for style.
But standing there slicing veggies at the counter or catching the morning rays while brewing coffee, I felt good.
I felt like me.
Then Bram thought he’d solve our issues by asking his mom, Delyth, to come live with us.
“She can pitch in with the twins,” he said, like it made total sense. My mother-in-law showed up on a Tuesday with four bags and a take on every little thing:
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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