“Tell me the PIN to your card, Mom is at the store and wants to buy herself a phone”: my husband woke me up at seven in the morning, but neither he nor his mother had any idea what surprise I had prepared for them š²š«£
Weāve been married for almost three years, and during that time I became exhausted to the very last drop. I worked from morning until night, carried the entire household, groceries, bills, every expense ā and my husband, all this time, didnāt even try to look for a job.
Before the wedding he worked here and there, doing odd jobs. But when we started living together, he somehow decided that I was now obligated to support him.
But the worst part was his mother. My mother-in-law was convinced that her son should fully provide for her: gifts, clothes, medicine, trips, whims ā all of it, in her mind, should be āon his account.ā
And she didnāt care at all that āhis accountā was actually my money, my salary, and my tears after yet another sleepless night.
My husband regularly gave her money ā the money I earned ā bought her gifts, transferred her money āfor little things.ā I stayed silent, endured it, thinking that family meant compromise, that you shouldnāt ruin relationships.
But lately they had crossed every possible line. My mother-in-law started messaging me almost every day with things she āneededā: cosmetics, a new blouse, help with her loan. My husband constantly repeated that āMom has to live well.ā And me? To them, I was nothing but a walking wallet.
That day was my only day off. I could finally sleep. I had just closed my eyes when the bedroom door flew open. My husband yanked the blanket off me, leaned over, and said in a tone as if I were his servant:
ā Tell me the PIN to your card. Mom is at the store and wants to buy a new phone.
I lay there half-asleep, trying to understand what was happening. He knew perfectly well that my salary had been deposited the day before and that I hadnāt spent a single cent. I turned to him and calmly said:
ā Let her buy it with her own money.
Thatās when he exploded. He started shouting that I was stingy, that I didnāt respect his mother, that āMom deserves the best.ā He insulted me, threatened me, demanded the PIN. And at that moment I realized: enough. No more patience, no more respect, no more trying to save anything. I had a plan ā very quiet, very simple, and very painful for them.
I gave him the PIN. But afterward I did something I donāt regret for a single second š±šØ Continued in the first comment šš
He left immediately, satisfied, without even thanking me. I closed my eyes and waited for the bank notification. As soon as I saw the withdrawal ā almost my entire salary gone to buy his motherās new phone ā I got up, took my phone, and called the police.
ā My card was stolen, ā I said calmly. ā The money was taken without my consent. Yes, I know the address of the person who did it. Yes, Iām ready to give a statement.
A few hours later my mother-in-law was arrested right at her home. The phone she had bought with my money was still in her hand. She was taken to the station, where she tried to whine that āher son had allowed it.ā But the card was in my name. The payment ā without my consent. Legally ā pure theft. She now faces a fine or even criminal charges.
And my husband⦠My husband stormed home in fury, yelling that I had ruined his motherās life.
I quietly packed his things, put the suitcase by the door, and said:
ā For three years you lived at my expense. Thatās enough. Go support your mother on your own.
And I closed the door in his face.

