Connect with us

З життя

My Husband Left Me for Another Woman, and When He Had an Accident, My Mother-in-Law Insisted I Must Take Him Back into the Family.

Published

on

My husband walked out on me for another woman, and when he crashed his car, my motherinlaw told me I had to take him back into the family.

John left our family a year ago. He simply announced that hed met someone else he loved, that hed had enough of me and probably never truly loved me at all. Now, he claimed, hes feeling real emotions and wants a proper family.

He didnt even consider that I couldnt get back to work because our youngest, Max, was only eighteen months old. Our older boy, Oliver, was at nursery, and we were scraping the bottom of the barrel. The only relative I had was my sister, who lives in London.

Dont worry, youll manage, my motherinlaw said. The flat is yours, so youll at least have a roof over your head. Be glad my son is still paying you maintenance.

Yes, he really was a tidy onequarter of his declared salary.

John never filed for divorce, and I simply didnt have the time. Two toddlers, a freelance gig just to keep the lights on it was all a massive strain.

My motherinlaw popped round to see the grandchildren once a month, sometimes bringing over a bag of apples.

Their father stayed out of the daytoday. He explained that hed now have his own children to look after.

So we survived a whole year, me and the kids, fighting for the next meal.

At the end of that year a place opened up at the nursery and Max got in. I could finally go back to work and things eased a touch.

My John will be a dad soon, my motherinlaw chirped one day over the phone, adding, File the divorce quickly I dont want my grandchild born out of wedlock.

I later learned that Johns new partner was already eight weeks pregnant, so I filed the divorce papers.

A week after that, John got into a car crash. He loved speed and risky overtakes and this time fate turned its back on him.

The car wed bought together during the marriage was written off, and John ended up in hospital with a slew of injuries. Doctors were grim: they didnt expect him to walk again.

My motherinlaw was weeping on the phone. I felt a pang of pity for her; after all, John was still my husband. Then she dropped a bombshell:

You have to collect John from the hospital and look after him, she said.

Me? Why me? I asked, stunned.

Youre his wife; you havent finalised the divorce yet, she replied. His girlfriend aborted the pregnancy yesterday she doesnt want a child with a disabled dad. And you, as his wife, are responsible!

The divorce wasnt final because the court date had been postponed while he was in the hospital.

I told my motherinlaw that my duties as a wife ended the moment her son walked out on us without a hint of remorse. Hed spent a year ignoring me and the kids.

He left me, betrayed me and the children, I said. That were not divorced yet is an unlucky coincidence Ill sort out soon. John still has his mother, who dotes on him.

You expect me to look after my son now? she snapped. I stopped caring when he was a child. Its the wifes job! Youre heartless and ungrateful. Ill tell my grandchildren that their mother dumped their father when he became disabled.

Now it looks as if Im the one who abandoned him not he who left a year ago!

Eventually my motherinlaw fetched John from the hospital. Hes recovering slowly, and the doctors have become a bit more hopeful. Our divorce finally went through.

These days my former motherinlaw is telling anyone in Bristol who will listen: Now I have to care for my sick son in my old age! His wife left him, the kids too! What kind of women are we dealing with these days? As long as a man is healthy and brings home a wage, hes welcome. The moment hes disabled, hes cast aside!

And you know what? Plenty of people nod in agreement, shaking their heads with feigned sympathy. Yet it was John who walked out on me and the children while he was still fit as a fiddle.

A mate of mine suggests I sell the flat and move far away. My sister in London has offered me a room. I think Ill take her up on that.

What would you advise me to do?

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Ваша e-mail адреса не оприлюднюватиметься. Обов’язкові поля позначені *

п'ять × чотири =

Також цікаво:

З життя39 хвилин ago

My Thrifty Friends Invited Me to a Birthday Party—But I Came Home Hungry

I have friends I jokingly call thrifty. They save on almost everythingfrom food to clothes. Its not that theyre hard...

З життя51 хвилина ago

My Daughter-in-Law Won’t Let Me See My Grandchild Unless I Bring Money, and My Son Doesn’t Say a Word

My son isnt divorced. He lives with his girlfriend, but he has no say in anything. Every time I try...

З життя2 години ago

He Doesn’t Love You Anymore. Build Your Own Life Without Him! We’re Happy Together. You Must Admit It’s Not Right to Live Without Feelings. Mark Isn’t Leaving His Child—He’s Leaving You.

Leave me alone! cried Emily to Alice, whose cheeks were streaked with tears. Go and live your own lifewithout him!...

З життя2 години ago

When I Retired, I Downsized from a Three-Bedroom Flat to a Studio—and I Haven’t Regretted It for a Moment

When I finally retired, I found myself living alone in a rather spacious two-bedroom flat. It wasnt just me a...

З життя3 години ago

He Left When She Was Nine Months Pregnant and Asked to Come Back Three Years Later

Its absolutely true what they say: the longer couples date, the more disastrous their marriages often turn out. Irony at...

З життя3 години ago

Yes, the flat is small, but we’ll buy your cousin a bed.

Anyone who works will understand the sense of dread I felt when the doorbell rang early on my one day...

З життя3 години ago

The last message I sent her was brief: “I’m here if you need anything.” It sat with the status “Sent” for exactly eight hundred and forty days.

The final message I sent her was brief: Im here if you need anything. It sat with the status Sent...

З життя3 години ago

“We’re modern people, right?—So I suggested we move in together, but with a catch: expenses 50/50, and all the housework’s yours, since you’re the woman… The room fell silent. I was stunned…”

Were living in the twenty-first century, after all, I said, suggesting we move in togetherwith one condition: we split expenses...