When my mother-in-law, Linda, moved in, she insisted she was just a “guest” and refused to lift a finger. She left dirty dishes, smeared mirrors, and tossed laundry into my hamper like it was her right. Jason, my husband, brushed it off “She’s my mom, let her be comfortable.” Meanwhile, I was stuck cleaning up after two adults like a hotel maid.
Everything snapped when I caught her sipping my special coffee from my favorite mug, surrounded by a mess she’d made. I calmly asked her to help, and she waved me off like staff. That’s when I decided if she wanted to be treated like a guest, I’d give her the full experience. And oh, did I commit to the role.
I made breakfast menus, turned off the WiFi at night, and left housekeeping signs after cleaning her messes. I stopped cooking dinner and replaced it with takeout menus in her room. Then I delivered the final touch: an itemized invoice for her “stay.” She exploded furious, shocked, and suddenly feeling very unwelcome.
She stormed to Jason, but he didn’t defend her. “Maybe it’s for the best,” he said, and within a week, she was gone. Peace returned, dishes stayed clean, and Jason finally saw my side. Linda didn’t want to clean so she cleaned herself right out of my house.