I was finally enjoying a quiet Saturday folding laundry, sipping lukewarm coffee, and fantasizing about a nap. Then my husband, Alex, walked in with his usual smug grin and announced, “My family’s coming over today. You’ve got four hours.” Four hours? For an unannounced visit from his parents, sister, and their kids? He handed me a list of tasks—clean the house, buy groceries, cook dinner and dessert then dropped onto the couch like a king expecting to be served. I looked at the note, then at him, and thought: Not happening today.
With a pleasant smile, I said, “Sure, I’ll head to the store.” And I did. To Target. No cart, no groceries. Just me, a latte, and two peaceful hours browsing candles and home décor. I sent a text: “Still at the store. Traffic’s insane ” Then ignored every call and voice message that followed.
When I finally walked through the door thirty minutes after his family had arrived I saw exactly what I expected: chaos. Kids yelling, burnt pizza, his mom disapproving of everything, and Alex frantically trying to make a store-bought cheesecake look homemade. He blurted out, “Where have you been?!”
I raised my glass of wine and replied, “You told me to go to the store. So I went.”
Dinner was a mess. Me? I was perfectly content. No apron. No stress. Just watching the scene unfold.
Later that evening, he tried to start an argument. “You embarrassed me.” I calmly said, “No. You embarrassed yourself. I’m not your maid.” He didn’t have a comeback. And guess what? He changed. He started pitching in, cleaned without being asked, and even offered to help plan the next family visit together. That Target trip? It wasn’t just a break. It was a wake-up call for him. And he’s never tried to pull that move again.