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“How Can You Refuse to Look After My Son’s Child?”: An English Mother-in-Law’s Outburst – Family Tensions Flare as Rita Stands Her Ground on Parenting, Work–Life Balance, and Respect in a Modern Blended Family

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How can you say you wont take care of my sons child? My future mother-in-law had blurted out, unable to hide her indignation.

For one, I replied, I havent ever turned my nose up at little Henry. Id like to remind you that, in this house, after work, I, as a proper wife and mother, take up a second shift in the kitchen, doing the washing and the cleaning. I’m happy to help where I can or offer advice, but taking on all the parental duties myself is not something I intend to do.

What do you mean, you dont intend to? she snapped, her face twisted with disapproval. Is that who you really are, a hypocrite?

Oh, Olivia, who needs work that doesnt pay anyway? At our school reunion, as was her wont, Sarah couldnt resist passing comment, true to old habits of picking apart everyones business.

But those days had long since gone, days when I, Olivia, had no retort on the tip of my tongue. Now, I had no trouble finding the right words, so naturally, I seized the opportunity to put talkative Sarah in her place.

Just because you have to think where your next pound is coming from doesnt mean the rest of us have the same problems, I replied with casual indifference, giving a small shrug. Ive two flats in London, inherited from my father.

The first was where my parents and I lived before their divorce, and the second came to him from my grandparents, which later passed to me.

And you can imagine that rents in London are hardly small potatoes I have more than enough for living comfortably and treating myself, so I don’t have to settle for a job simply because it pays.

Isnt that why you swapped working as a nurse for a job in a shop?

In truth, that was supposed to be a secret. I had promised Sarah I wouldnt say a word. But if she really wanted to keep her affairs quiet, she ought not to insult me publicly.

Did she really think such cheek would pass unchallenged? If so, she was sorely mistaken.

A shop assistant, really?

You promised youd keep it quiet! Sarah squeaked in wounded protest.

Grabbing her handbag, she fled the restaurant, obviously struggling not to cry.

She had it coming, Andrew commented after a pause.

Ill say. I was just about at my wits end with her. Who even invited her? Tanya chimed in.

Well, I did, Anna, once our form captain and now organiser of the reunion, apologised. I know Sarah was difficult back at school, but people can change or so I thought

But not always, I said, shrugging.

We all laughed, and from there, the conversation moved on to my own line of work.

The curiosity (and it was truly just curiosity, not an undercurrent of criticism about my decisions or intellect) was easy to understand. Few ever come across my particular field, and even fewer care to, given the choice there are plenty of myths and misconceptions surrounding it.

So, during the evening, as old schoolmates listened, I tried to dispel what misbeliefs I could.

So whats even the point of helping them, if theres no hope? someone asked.

Who said there isnt? Let me explain. I know of a boy, five years old. There were complications at birth, a shortage of oxygen, and now hes developmentally delayed.

But his prognosis is very promising he started talking closer to three, and his parents take him round all the specialists. With any luck, hell be going to a regular class in primary school, and should manage just fine in life.

If hed been ignored and left without help, it would have been a totally different story.

I see. So instead of chasing after every penny, youve taken on work that matters to society, summarised William, one of the old boys.

With that, talk moved on to updates about everyones families and lives.

It was just then that I felt the oddest sense of being watched. I brushed it off as paranoia, but the feeling kept returning. Stealing an inconspicuous glance around the restaurant, I realised no one had their eyes on me. Not a soul among the patrons seemed at all interested and soon I was back to laughing with the group, and forgot entirely about it.

A week after the reunion, I left the house early for work only to find my car blocked in. Dialling the number on the offending cars windscreen, I got a barrage of apologies and a promise to come down straight away.

Im ever so sorry, the cheerful young man said, darting over as soon as he appeared. I had an errand, and there was nowhere else to park only this spot would do. Im Matthew, by the way.

Olivia, I replied, unable to keep from smiling. There was something about Matthew I instantly liked in his manner, his dress, even the scent he wore. I agreed easily when he suggested coffee, and then to dinner.

Soon, in three months time, I could hardly picture life without Matthew. His mother and his little boy Henry, from a previous marriage, embraced me as family.

Henry had his own struggles, but with my professional experience, we hit it off. At Matthews request, I even showed him ways to connect with his son and help him thrive.

By the end of our first year together, we moved in with Matthew and Henry. I let out my own one-bedroom flat through my usual London agency and packed my bags for my new home.

And thats when the first alarm bells sounded.

It started off small Would you help Henry get ready? or Could you keep an eye on him while I pop to the shops? perfectly reasonable, seeing as Henry and I got along, and I wasnt otherwise engaged at the time. But slowly, these little favours grew weightier, harder to ignore.

Eventually, I had to have the conversation with Matthew: that, while I wanted to help where I could, the bulk of caring for his child was his responsibility, not mine. I was happy to support and guide, but I had no intention of shouldering more than a fifth of Henrys care not when he wasnt my son, and every day at work was already spent with special-needs children.

Matthew seemed to understand. But as our wedding neared, he and his mother began to discuss the boys rehabilitation programme in my presence, but with the clear expectation that I would be carrying it all out in my free time.

All right, thats enough, I intervened. Matthew, we both agreed that Henry is your responsibility. I havent ever asked you to scrub my mums kitchen, mend her fence or sort her troubles, have I? I look after my family, you look after yours.

Well, thats different a mother is a grown woman living independently, while a child is a child, his mother replied with a scoff. Are you telling me that, after the wedding, you plan to keep ignoring Henry and think well all accept it?

I hardly ignore Henry. Id remind you, after work I cook, wash and clean around here like any diligent wife or mother. But Im not taking on Henrys therapy too hes Matthews son, and that comes first for Matthew. I can help and advise, but not take on the full burden.

So you really mean youre just going to leave it? Thats rich coming from you, so happy to talk up your work to your friends but when the time comes to actually care for a child, suddenly youre nowhere to be found?

What are you even talking about? I asked, bewildered.

And then the pieces fell into place I remembered Matthews mother working as a dishwasher in that very restaurant during the reunion. Suddenly, everything made sense.

So this was all a setup, so you could land Henrys care on me?

And what did you think, that I was ever truly keen on you? Matthew sneered, his restraint gone. If not for Henry and your job, Id never have looked your way

Oh, youd never have looked my way? Well, dont bother now. With that, I pulled the ring from my finger and threw it at my former fiancé.

Youll regret it, Matthew and his mother warned. No decent man wants a dull mouse with a dead-end job and no money.

Ive got two flats in London, so moneys the least of my worries, I replied breezily, relishing the look that passed between them.

Then I went to pack.

Soon, there came the inevitable attempts to patch things up: promises that hed handle Henry himself, that hed never speak to me like that again, that hed just been overwrought and so sorry and he loved me and please, please, dont leave.

But I was no fool to believe it. I laughed in the end and told him hed lost his little mouse, and it didnt look as though Id be the one living with regret.

Later, my old classmates and I had a good chuckle about the whole affair. As for me, I still held out hope that one day, Id find someone whod love me not for my savings or my skills, but for the soul they found in me.

And until then, I had my work that I loved, my friends, and possibly the prospect of a cat at least cats can be trained, which is more than can be said for some men.

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The Recipe for Happiness… Everyone in the block watched as new residents moved into the second-floor flat—a family led by the supervisor of a key factory in a small provincial English town. “Why would they choose an old building to live in?” pensioner Mrs. Nina Anderson asked her friends. “With their connections, they surely could’ve snatched up a new-build somewhere fancy.” “Don’t judge by yourself, Mum,” replied her unmarried thirty-year-old daughter Anna, her make-up bright. “This is a proper period flat—high ceilings, big separate rooms, a spacious hallway, and the balcony’s almost a full room on its own! Besides, they had a phone line put in right away—not many of us do; just three phones among nine flats…” “You just want to chat on the phone all the time,” her mother chided. “The neighbours are sick of it. Don’t you dare bother these serious people—they lead busy lives…” “They aren’t so serious, Mum—they’re young. Their daughter Natasha is only nine. They’re my age, maybe five years older,” Anna insisted. The new neighbours turned out to be polite and friendly. Lydia worked as a school librarian, while Ivan already had a decade of factory experience. Anna relayed all this to the women on the communal bench where her mother and the other ladies chatted each night. “And how do you already know all this?” they teased her. “You’re like a regular detective!” “I pop in to use their phone—they let me, unlike some people,” Anna hinted, recalling neighbours who pretended not to be home to avoid her hour-long gossip sessions. So, Anna got to know the newcomers and grew increasingly fond of dropping by to chat to her friends or colleagues—sometimes in her smart new outfits, sometimes in cosy house clothes—always on the lookout for friendship. One day she noticed Ivan firmly shutting the sitting room door when she arrived to make a call. It happened more than once. Anna would smile at Lydia in the kitchen and thank her after her calls, but Lydia only nodded and asked her to pull the door shut as she left. “Can’t close behind me, hands are covered in flour,” Lydia would say. “The lock clicks itself—French, you see.” “Ooh, baking again? More pies? You always have something in the oven… I never learned how,” Anna admitted. “Yes, I’m prepping cheese danishes for breakfast. No time in the mornings, so I do it now,” Lydia smiled, turning back to her dough. Anna would leave, sulking at their lack of warmth. “Lydia, you find it hard to tell her no, but our phone’s always busy thanks to her—my mates can’t get hold of me,” Ivan once remarked. “I did notice she’s making herself far too comfortable, treating our home like a drop-in centre,” agreed Lydia. That evening, Anna, dressed up and with bright lipstick, was again perched on the hallway stool gossiping into the receiver. “Anna, are you nearly done? We’re expecting a call,” said Lydia after ten minutes. Anna nodded and hung up, but then produced a bar of chocolate. “I’ve brought a treat for tea—let’s celebrate getting to know each other!” She headed for the kitchen, placing the chocolate on the table. “Please, take it away,” Lydia said. “If Natasha sees, she’ll be tempted, but she’s allergic—no sweets allowed. No tea for us, sorry; chocolate’s taboo here.” “What? Taboo? Well, suit yourself. I meant well,” said a flustered Anna. “No need for gifts. And use the phone only if it’s for something important—a doctor, an emergency. That’s different, even in the middle of the night—we understand. But otherwise, please, not so often,” Lydia said as kindly as she could. Anna took back her chocolate and left without a word, confused by their coldness and blaming Lydia’s jealousy. “She can see I’m younger and prettier, Mum—that’s why. I only wanted some friendly company over tea,” Anna lamented. “You’re stubborn and foolish,” sighed Mrs. Anderson. “Stop pushing into other people’s homes. Make friends on your own terms—get your own phone, invite neighbours to yours if you must!” Anna’s last attempt at befriending Lydia came when she arrived with a notepad, asking for the danish recipe. “You’d best ask your mother—she knows all the recipes,” Lydia replied, surprised. “I don’t use exact amounts, I do it by eye. My hands just remember,” she smiled, hurrying out. Anna blushed and went home. Of course, her mum had an old recipe notebook stuffed in a kitchen cupboard with scribbled-down instructions for everything—salads, pies, even festive fish terrine. Anna didn’t want to bake herself, but with her own mother’s baking days long past, she finally gave it a go. She found the recipe, to her mother’s amazement. “Are you really going to bake something?” Mrs. Anderson exclaimed. “Why is that so surprising?” Anna asked. “Perhaps things with Slav are getting serious…” her mum guessed. “What if they are?” Anna retorted. “So be it—you’re long overdue! Want advice with the recipe?” “No need. Just preparing myself,” came the reply. But when her mother returned from her walk a few days later, the warm scent of fresh pastries filled the flat. “Goodness‒pies!” Mrs. Anderson exclaimed. “You must be in love; nothing else explains it!” “Shh, not so loud,” Anna smiled. “Taste for yourself—these are cheese danishes, just like the old days.” The teacups were out, and a plate piled with golden sunburst treats awaited. “You haven’t lost your touch,” her mother praised. “It’s like old times.” “Don’t just say so—do they taste right?” Anna asked. “Try for yourself! There’s nothing wrong with them—your father used to say ‘that’s edible’ and it was the highest praise!” Anna pondered. “Maybe I’ll invite Slav for tea soon—what do you think?” “Oh, he’ll love them, I’m sure. I won your father over with danishes too—couldn’t get enough of them or me!” Mrs. Anderson chuckled. “You keep baking, and I’ll go watch a film with the neighbour. Time you settled down—curls and dresses alone won’t catch a man!” Soon, Anna’s boyfriend Slav started coming round. There were fewer arguments, and her mother grew used to the couple’s laughter and busy kitchen. When Anna announced they’d put in for the register office, her mother even shed a tear of joy. Anna had slimmed for the wedding, and Slav joked: “Have you stopped baking danishes for good? Will we have pies at the wedding feast?” Wedding preparations were a family affair, with Anna, her mother, and aunt cooking for two days, though just twenty close relatives were invited. The newlyweds had the largest room in the shared flat. Within a year, the whole building was equipped with telephones. Anna called everyone at first—but kept her chats brief. “Sorry, Rita, have to dash—the dough is ready and Slav will be home soon!” Now, with a baby on the way, Anna kept baking—her husband’s favourite cheese danishes, always fresh and homemade. And he adored her, for her warmth, her treats, and their happy home.

The Recipe for Happiness Everyone in the block was watching as the new family moved into the second-floor flat. It...