I never imagined my summer would turn into a full-time unpaid daycare job. My husband’s ex has an important, demanding career, while I’m a stay-at-home wife. At first, I didn’t mind watching their three boys occasionally. But “occasionally” quickly turned into every single morning until late at night. She’d drop them off without warning, always with the same line: “I’m so busy, I owe you one.”
I snapped the day she left them on my porch at 6 a.m. without even knocking. I told her clearly, “I’m not a slave. If you want me to watch your kids every day, you’ll pay $120 a day.” She didn’t argue. She just gave me a cold stare and drove off. My husband stayed silent, and that silence hurt more than anything.
This morning, everything changed. I walked into my living room and froze. My entire coffee table was covered in neat stacks of cash — actual payment for every single day she had dumped the kids on me. And next to it was a handwritten note from her.
She wrote that she had never realized how much work I was doing, how much she had been taking advantage of me, and how she wanted things to be fair from now on. She even apologized for putting me in the middle.
For the first time all summer, I felt seen.
Sometimes the people who use you need to be shocked into realizing your worth. And sometimes the only way to stop being treated like a convenience is to finally say, “Enough.”