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I Welcomed My Friend After Her Divorce, But Over Time I Realised I Was Slowly Becoming a Servant in My Own Home

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I took my friend in after her divorce. Over time I realized I was slowly turning into a servant in my own home.

There are friendships that survive everything: weddings, breakups, children, funerals. Wed known each other for more than thirty years. We studied for exams together, shared our first heartbreaks, and when she moved to Liverpool she always came back with her I could be myself.

So when, one night, she called me completely exhausted and said simply, I have nowhere to go, I didnt think twice. I said, Come. Theres always a room for you here.

The first few days felt like our youth again long chats, laughter, memories. After my husband James died, the house was too quiet, and her presence oddly soothed me. I tried to look after her: I cooked, gave her the best guest bed, bought fresh towels so shed feel comfortable. She promised to stay a couple of weeks while she got back on her feet.

But a month passed then another. She wasnt looking for a flat, wasnt sending out CVs, didnt get up in the mornings Im reclaiming the sleep I missed for years. She roamed the house in a bathrobe, claimed the sofa, and would ask, Did you buy my strawberry yoghurt? I love the fruit one as if it were perfectly normal.

Gradually I felt myself fading. Id come home from work and shed be sitting at the kitchen table, sipping tea and reading my newspaper. When I asked her to at least make a soup, she just laughed, Youre better at it, Im hopeless.

I was the one washing the dishes, doing the grocery shop. The fridge filled with everything she liked. The bathroom stocked with only her cosmetics. The television always tuned to her favourite series.

One afternoon I invited another friend, Lucy, over for coffee. Poppy complained that she didnt feel comfortable having strangers in the house and even shooed my cat, Whiskers, away allergy.

For a long while I excused her behaviour, telling myself she was hurting after the divorce, disoriented, and that I should just endure. Then she started rearranging the furniture, insisting, It works better this way, and I understood she had crossed a line.

The hardest day came when she asked me, after work, to pick up her laundry from the cleaners and buy groceries I dont have the strength to go out. I arrived, barely able to carry the bags, and she asked, Did you get the right detergent? Dont mix them up. Something inside me snapped.

For the first time in ages I spoke firmly: We need to talk. This cant continue. This is my house. You need to start thinking about where youll move.

At first she looked bewildered, then offended, claiming I didnt understand anything and only thought of myself. It was painful, but I knew if I didnt set boundaries now I would lose my own sense of self.

A few days later she slammed the door on her way out. Guilt lingered, as if Id betrayed a family member. Yet slowly the house began to breathe again. I felt the space belong to me, my life, my rules.

A couple of months later a brief text arrived: Sorry. I was completely lost then. Thank you for helping, even though I didnt appreciate it. I replied wishing her well and thought, sometimes the toughest thing is saying no to someone you care about. If you wait too long, you risk losing the most valuable thing of all yourself.

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