I had just come home from work, juggling grocery bags, exhausted, and barely got one shoe off when my mother-in-law stormed out of the living room like a general leading an army.
“UNBELIEVABLE!” she shouted. “I’VE BEEN SITTING HERE FOR TWO HOURS AND YOUR HUSBAND STILL HASN’T EATEN!”
I blinked, still holding a bag of vegetables. “Is he five? The microwave’s right there.”
Her face turned crimson. “How dare you talk to me like that? Have you forgotten where we found you? If this keeps up, I’ll—”
“You’ll what?” I said calmly, setting the groceries down. “Tell your grown son to make himself a sandwich?”
That was it. She went completely silent. My husband, who’d been sitting on the couch the whole time, looked like a deer in headlights. I turned to him and asked, “Did you really wait two hours for food while your mother sat here watching you starve?”
He mumbled, “I didn’t want to upset her.”
That’s when I realized the problem wasn’t just her — it was the way he let her control everything. I walked over, handed him a pan, and said, “Well, lesson one of adulthood: you can cook too.”
Later that night, my husband apologized. “I’ve never seen anyone stand up to her like that,” he admitted. “It was about time.”
Since that day, things changed in our house. My mother-in-law still visits, but she knocks first — and my husband, finally, learned how to use the microwave.