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    Home » My Husband Told Me My Career Could Wait… Because His Mother Was Coming to Live With Us
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    My Husband Told Me My Career Could Wait… Because His Mother Was Coming to Live With Us

    JuliaBy Julia14/03/20269 Mins Read
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    My husband told me my career could wait… because his mother was coming to live with us. That was the exact moment I decided to teach him a lesson he would never forget.

    “Your career can wait. My mother is coming, and you’ll take care of her. Period. No discussion.”

    Alejandro said those words without taking his eyes off his phone.

    He was sitting in the kitchen wearing an old T-shirt and house shorts, eating a bread roll with jam while scrolling through his screen—as if he were talking about the weather… and not about my life.

    I froze beside the stove, holding the coffee pot.

    My first impulse was to throw the boiling coffee straight into his satisfied face.

    The second… was to turn around and slam the door so hard the walls would shake.

    But I did neither.

    “Say that again, please,” I said with a calmness that surprised even me.

    Alejandro looked up with annoyance.

    “Come on, Gabriela, don’t exaggerate. My mother isn’t well, she can’t stay alone. And you spend the whole day at the office. Such a big boss, right?”

    Outside, a thin October rain was falling over the streets of Mexico City.

    I looked at the man with whom I had shared seven years of my life.
    The man with whom I had a son, a mortgage, plans, memories…

    And suddenly… I didn’t recognize him.

    “Alejandro, I’m the director of the marketing department at a company that brings in hundreds of millions of pesos. I have eight people reporting to me and I’m managing a project worth more than four hundred million.”

    He shrugged.

    “So what? They’ll find someone else. You only get one mother.”

    The coffee pot trembled slightly in my hand.

    The coffee was about to boil.

    “Our son is also one of a kind, just so you remember.”

    “Mateo spends the whole day at daycare. There’s no problem with him. My mother, on the other hand, needs constant care.”

    I removed the coffee pot from the heat and slowly poured coffee into the cups.

    I needed time to think.

    My mother-in-law, Doña Teresa, had recently broken her leg.
    But calling her “sick and helpless” was a huge exaggeration.

    At sixty-five she was more active than many women in their forties.
    She went to the theater downtown, met friends for coffee… and always found a way to interfere in our family life when she visited.

    “When does she arrive?” I asked.

    “Next week. Monday.”

    So everything had already been decided.

    Without me.

    He had spoken to his mother, arranged everything… and I was only being informed.

    As if I were the household help.

    “Besides, you can work from home,” he added. “You have flexible hours.”

    “Alejandro, I’m not self-employed.”

    He frowned.

    “Well… you know. A man can’t take care of an older woman. That’s not a man’s job.”

    Not a man’s job.

    But living off my salary while he had spent three years “finding himself” in graphic design… that was fine.

    Paying the mortgage, the daycare, the bills, the groceries…
    apparently that was a woman’s job.

    And giving up my career for his mother?

    Of course.

    “And what if I don’t agree?” I asked quietly.

    He looked at me as if I had said something completely ridiculous.

    “Gabriela, don’t be silly. My mother gave me life, raised me, sacrificed everything for me. I can’t abandon her now. And you… you’re not a stranger.”

    I’m not a stranger.

    So I must sacrifice myself.

    I sat across from him, holding the hot cup with both hands.
    It burned… but it helped keep my head cool.

    “Alright,” I said. “Give me time to think.”

    “Think about what?” he muttered, already glued to his phone again. “You resign, work your notice period, and that’s it. Case closed.”

    At that moment I understood everything.

    He truly believed I would do exactly what he said.

    Because I’m his wife.
    Because “that’s how things are done.”
    Because his mother comes before everything.

    I smiled.

    A sweet smile.

    “Of course, darling. It will be exactly the way you want.”

    He didn’t even notice the irony.

    At the office I couldn’t concentrate.

    I attended meetings, talked about strategies and campaigns… but one sentence kept echoing in my mind:

    “Your career can wait.”

    “Gabriela, are you okay?” my deputy Mariana asked. “You look very pale today.”

    “Family matters,” I replied.

    By the end of the day I had a plan.

    It wasn’t particularly noble.

    But it was… absolutely fair.

    If Alejandro wanted to play a game where my opinion didn’t matter…

    fine.

    But I would set the rules.

    I knocked on the office door of the CEO, Patricia.

    “Patricia, I need to talk to you. In private.”

    I told her everything: my husband’s ultimatum… and my idea.

    “I need an unpaid leave of absence. A couple of months. Officially I’m still on the payroll.”

    Patricia smiled.

    “And where’s the trick?”

    “If my husband calls or shows up here… tell him I quit.”

    Patricia burst out laughing.

    “You’re going to teach him a lesson?”

    “I want him to feel what it’s like when someone decides for you.”

    “And what will you do at home?”

    I smiled.

    “I’ll be the perfect daughter-in-law.”

    I paused.

    “So perfect… that they’ll get tired of it quickly.”

    Patricia nodded.

    “Alright. But after two months at most you come back. I have a project that can’t move forward without you.”

    “I think everything will end much sooner.”

    I went home feeling light.

    Almost happy.

    For the first time in a long time… I felt I had regained control of my life.

    Alejandro was, as usual, in the kitchen with his phone.
    Mateo was playing in his room.

    “Alejandro,” I said calmly. “I submitted my resignation.”

    He looked up abruptly.

    “Really?”

    “Yes. You’re right. Family is the most important thing. Your mother needs care. I’ll manage.”

    He smiled, satisfied.

    “I knew you’d understand.”

    “Of course,” I nodded. “By the way… when exactly does she arrive?”

    “Monday morning.”

    “Perfect.”

    I smiled.

    “I have the whole weekend to prepare.”

    Alejandro frowned.

    “Prepare for what?”

    I looked at him calmly.

    “To welcome your mother… completely prepared.”

    He didn’t know it yet.

    But that “preparation”…

    was about to change his life completely.

    Alejandro was happy.

    He thought everything had gone exactly the way he wanted.

    It only took two weeks for him to realize…

    how wrong he was.

    Part 2

    On Monday morning I woke up before the alarm clock rang. It was just after six. I felt calm, focused, with a clarity I hadn’t felt in a long time. Alejandro slept deeply beside me, occupying almost his entire half of the bed, his phone on the nightstand. I watched him for a few seconds and thought about how confident he had been. How certain he was that I would simply obey.

    At ten minutes to eight I was at the train station in Mexico City. Doña Teresa stepped off the train leaning on a cane, dragging a large suitcase and wearing her usual expression of permanent disapproval.

    “Gabriela? Did you come alone? Where’s Alejandro?” she asked without even greeting me.

    “Alejandro has a complicated morning,” I replied calmly. “But don’t worry, I’ll take care of everything.”

    She pursed her lips but said nothing.

    As soon as we arrived home, I handed her a folder. Transparent, organized, filled with printed sheets and schedules marked down to the minute.

    “Eight-thirty, breakfast. Nine, light leg exercises. Ten, short walk. Eleven, tea and rest. Twelve, massage…”

    “Massage?” she raised an eyebrow suspiciously.

    “Of course. Recovery requires discipline and consistency.”

    During the following days I was impeccable.
    Too impeccable.

    Doña Teresa couldn’t take a single step without me supervising her. I reminded her how to sit, when to stand up, what she shouldn’t eat “so as not to interfere with her recovery.” I eliminated sweet bread, sugary treats, and strong coffee. Everything carefully justified.

    “Gabriela, I’ve eaten like this my whole life,” she protested, increasingly irritated.

    “I know, but now we’re in a therapeutic process,” I always replied with a calm smile.

    Alejandro soon began to notice the consequences of his decision. A few days later I casually mentioned that we would have to adjust our expenses.

    “What do you mean adjust?” he asked, confused.

    “Well… I no longer have a salary. And the savings are going toward medication, supplements, special food. That’s normal, right?”

    I canceled subscriptions, reduced “unnecessary” expenses—including his budget for creative projects. I began asking him to accompany his mother to the doctor, to help her shower whenever I said I was exhausted.

    “Gabriela, I don’t know how to do that…” he muttered uncomfortably.

    “What do you mean you don’t? She’s your mother. And I need to rest too. I can’t do everything.”

    After two weeks the tension was obvious.

    Doña Teresa was in a bad mood, Alejandro exhausted, and I… surprisingly calm.

    One night, when Mateo was already asleep, Alejandro sat across from me in the kitchen. His shoulders were slumped.

    “Gabriela… I think I made a mistake.”

    I looked at him silently.

    “In everything,” he continued. “In the way I spoke to you. In deciding for you. I didn’t understand what it meant to give up your life.”

    “Do you understand now?” I asked.

    “Yes. And I’m ashamed of it.”

    The next day Doña Teresa asked to speak with me.

    “Gabriela, I think it would be better if I return home earlier,” she said coldly. “I’ll manage on my own. Or hire someone.”

    “As you wish,” I replied evenly.

    That same day Alejandro received a call from Patricia. She explained that after my “departure,” several projects had stalled and an important client was very upset.

    Alejandro collapsed onto the sofa.

    “You lied to me…” he whispered.

    “No,” I replied calmly. “I just didn’t correct an assumption.”

    When Doña Teresa left, I called Patricia. Two days later I returned to my office. To my routine. To myself.

    That night Alejandro was waiting for me with dinner prepared, the table carefully set.

    “I’m not asking you to forgive me,” he said. “But I want you to know something: I will never make decisions for you again.”

    I looked at him for a long moment.

    “Alejandro, I’m no longer the woman who accepts orders. If I ever hear ‘your career can wait’ again, this story will truly be over.”

    He nodded slowly.

    “I understand.”

    And in that moment I knew the lesson had been learned.

    Not with shouting.

    Not with accusations.

    But with reality.

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