As a work-from-home mom of two toddlers, chaos is my normal. But when my husband Nathan called with five minutes’ notice to say he was bringing his new boss over for dinner—and wanted me to whip up a roast—I almost snapped.This wasn’t new. Nathan regularly assumed my time, my energy, and my
silence. I always made it work. But not this time.I set the table like I was hosting royalty, wedding China and all. Then I served exactly what I had time for: cold toast with canned tuna and baby carrots. Nathan’s boss, Celeste, raised an eyebrow. When I explained the five-minute timeline and Nathan’s assumption that I’d “figure it out,” she burst out laughing.
She stayed twenty minutes, praised my quick thinking, and left with a pointed remark: “Let’s schedule dinners through me next time.”Nathan was furious. I was done. I reminded him I’m not just a mom or wife or scheduler—I’m a human being drowning in invisible labor. “I’ve already burned,” I told him. “You just didn’t smell the smoke.”To his credit, Nathan tried to change. He signed the kids up for daycare. Cooked
(badly at first). Took initiative. Showed up. Slowly, I saw the difference—not in grand gestures, but in the quiet: wiping spills, handling tantrums, laughing with the kids instead of calling for backup.Sometimes, I’d joke, “Tuna on toast tonight?” And he’d pale a little, but smile.Because now, he never forgets to ask. And I never feel invisible at the table.