З життя
My Mom Is Convinced My Girlfriend Is Only with Me for the Flat
My mother is convinced my girlfriend is only with me for the flat.
I live with my mum in a spacious three-bedroom apartment in the heart of vibrant London. The place came to us after my parents’ divorcemy father left, abandoning us completely. At first, he kept up some semblance of contact, calling occasionally to check in, but over the years, those calls dwindled. Now, he only reaches out with cold, automated messages during the holidays.
My mother, on the other hand, never managed to rebuild her love life. A few men crossed her path, but none made it past a couple of dates. Maybe she didnt truly want to, or perhaps she just never found someone who could replace my father.
As for me, relationships have always been a minefield. Ive had dates, nights out, but nothing serious ever materialised. I never clung to a relationship just to avoid being alone. If there wasnt that unmistakable spark, Id say so outright. Wasting my timeor someone elsesnever made sense to me.
But then, everything changed in an unexpected whirlwind.
I met the love of my life.
When I first locked eyes with Emily, I knew instantly it was different. From the very beginning, I felt a rare, powerful connection between us. I was lost in her, burning with the desire to spend every free moment by her side.
Emily had moved to London from a small village in the Lake District. She enrolled at university and was fighting to build a new life in the big city. Shes ambitious, sharp, kind, and breathtakingly beautiful. We grew close at lightning speed, started dating, and for the first time, I tasted pure, radiant happiness.
But soon, I discovered that this joy was, for my mother, an open woundan unbearable insult.
She rejected my choice with fury.
Ive always been honest with my mum. She knew about every girl Id dated; I never hid anything from her. So when I told her about Emily, I expected the usual reactionmaybe slight wariness, but also natural curiosity.
Instead, a storm erupted.
She wouldnt even listen. The moment I mentioned Emily was from out of town, she cut me off, shouting that this girl was only with me for my status, my comfort, andabove allour flat.
I was stunned, frozen in place.
Where had this idea come from? How could she judge someone so harshly, someone shed never met, never spoken to, never even heard speak?
My mother locked herself into relentless hostility against our relationship. She began making scenes, screaming until her voice gave out, collapsing in tears, hammering into me that I was about to make the worst mistake of my life. To her, Emily was just an opportunist, using me to settle in the city, and shed eventually shatter my heart and toss me aside like an old rag.
I tried to defend myself, to explain that Emily had never hinted at wanting to live with me. She had her own rented flat, never asked me for money or help. She was independent, used to relying only on herself.
But my mother was unmoved, unshakable as stone.
The pressure that crushed me.
At first, I tried to ignore her words. I trusted Emily; I knew she wasnt with me for the flat. But when you hear the same accusations day after day, doubt creeps in like slow poison.
I caught myself listening to my mothers venomous whispers.
I scrutinised Emilys every gesture, hunting for hidden intentions where there were none.
Why was she so affectionate? Was it an act? Why did she buy me gifts? Was she plotting something?
I drove myself to the edge of madness.
Emily, of course, noticed something was wrong. Shed ask if I was alright, if something terrible had happened. I wanted to confess everything, but shame choked me, gripping my throat like an invisible hand.
How could I tell the woman I loved that my own mother saw her as a heartless flat-hunter?
Love or family?
The conflict with my mother reached an unbearable peak.
She gave me an ultimatum, cold and sharp as a blade: either I ended things with Emily, or I could forget about having a normal relationship with her.
I was lost, teetering on the edge, my heart in tatters.
On one side, there was my mother. She raised me, cared for me, and I felt a crushing duty toward her, a debt I couldnt ignore.
But on the otherdont I deserve my own happiness? Dont I have the right to love the woman my heart has chosen?
My mother refused to hear my pleas. Her certainty was an impenetrable wall of steel.
I realised I had to make a choice.
But which one?
Im terrified of making the wrong move. I tremble at the thought of losing the one I love most, but Im not ready to cut ties with my mother.
What if shes just afraid of ending up alone, abandoned in silence? Or does she truly see something that love has blinded me to?
Im torn between duty and passion, stretched to breaking point. And right now, I dont know how to escape it.
Sometimes, the hardest choices force us to question which love is worth fighting forthe one were born into, or the one we choose.
