I installed a hidden camera to keep an eye on my mother-in-law, but when I saw what she was doing, I was horrified š±š±
I never imagined I could live in a constant state of tension. Before marriage, I thought a mother-in-law would be like in the movies: strict but fair, someone who would eventually accept youāespecially if you made an effort. And I did make an effort. Truly. But my mother-in-law seemed to have decided from the start: āYou donāt belong here.ā
She didnāt yell. She didnāt start fights. She just… slowly pushed me out of the picture.
At first, it was small things. Iād cook dinner ā she would āaccidentallyā oversalt the soup while I wasnāt looking. Iād do laundry ā sheād add bleach to my colored clothes. She claimed she hadnāt noticed.
Then my makeup started disappearing. My favorite lipstick suddenly turned up broken, my cream containers emptied. When I asked her, she just looked at me in surprise:
ā Maybe you forgot you already used it all?
One night I woke up to a strange smell ā the bedroom reeked of burnt fabric. I ran to the kitchen: the oven was on, and inside were my shoes. The same ones I was going to wear to a job interview. Of course, she denied everything:
ā Mustāve been one of the neighbors playing a prank.
I almost laughed ā but it wasnāt funny.
The final straw was the dress. The one I planned to wear to my friendās wedding. It had been hanging in the closet for a week. I checked it every day. But two hours before leaving, I found it… slashed to pieces.
My mother-in-law passed by the room and quietly said:
ā If itās not yours, itās not meant for you.
I told my husband everything, but he didnāt believe me. He said I was imagining things. Thatās when I decided to install the cameraāand what I saw left me in shock š±š± Continued in the first comment šš
I pointed the camera at the kitchen. Naively, I thought the worst Iād see was her spitting in my food or pouring salt on my plants. But the truth was far scarier.
On the second day, as I was reviewing the footage, I saw her walk up to my mug. She pulled out a small white packet. And poured something into my tea⦠it looked like sugar. But it wasnāt sugar. Then she took a spoon and stirred it thoroughly.
Her face had a chilling, lifeless smile. She whispered to herself:
ā This is better. You shouldnāt be here.
I didnāt sleep that night. The next morning, I brought the USB stick to the police.
That evening, I packed my things and left. My husband was on a business trip at the time, and I didnāt explain anything over the phone. Safety first. Explanations later.
A week later, I got the results. The powder she was putting in my tea turned out to be a veterinary sedative used to euthanize animals. In small doses ā weakness, dizziness, drowsiness. In larger amounts ā loss of consciousness, possible respiratory failure.
I remembered feeling strangely weak a few times, like I was losing time. I thought it was just exhaustion.
Now sheās under investigation. My husband is still in shock. He canāt believe his mother was capable of something like this.


