My husband requested that I move into the garage during his mother’s visit because she “felt uneasy” in my presence. I surprisingly agreed—but only on one very specific condition. I’ve always been aware that my husband is a total “mama’s boy”—the kind of man who stands a little straighter the second her name flashes on his phone. Our marriage only survived because of geography; we lived in different towns, miles away from her constant interference. His mother, Lorraine, lived two hours away and visited “occasionally,” which was really just code for an inspection. She would judge, comment, and leave, satisfied that she still held the reins. But last month, she announced a week-long stay in our city for “business meetings.” She flatly refused a hotel. “That’s absurd,” she declared. “My son owns a home.” Then came the impossible demand: she refused to step foot in the house if I was there. According to her, she simply “wasn’t comfortable” around me. She reminded my husband—loudly—that she was the one who had gifted him the down payment for the house. “I will be the only woman in this home,” Lorraine insisted. “I will not share my son’s space with his wife.” I expected my husband to defend our home. Instead, he approached me with shifty eyes and a hushed voice. “Could you… maybe stay somewhere else while she’s here?” he stammered. I laughed, assuming it was a pathetic joke. Then he dropped the bombshell. “It’s just for a few days. You won’t even have to encounter her. I’ll set up the garage. I’ll bring in a mattress. You can just stay out of her line of sight.” The garage. A cold concrete floor. No insulation. No privacy. All so his mother wouldn’t have to “catch my eye” in the hallway. I stared at him, waiting for a flicker of guilt or shame to cross his face. It never came. That was the exact second something inside me broke. I took a slow breath and gave him the one answer he never saw coming. “Fine,” I told him. “I’ll do it.” His shoulders visibly slumped with relief. “But,” I added with a sharp smile, “I have one non-negotiable condition.”

“Are you okay?”

“Is this temporary?”

“Why are you there?”

“You don’t deserve this.”

PEOPLE WERE STARTING TO TAKE NOTICE.

I started to type out answers, but what would I say? That my husband chose his mother’s comfort over my dignity?

It stung too much to put down in words.

I still hadn’t heard a peep from Jake or Lorraine.

That soon changed.

I STARTED TO TYPE OUT ANSWERS, BUT WHAT WOULD I SAY?

Jake sent me a text late that night.

You really didn’t have to post all that. It’s just one week.

I stared at the screen, then set the phone facedown on the nightstand, where it buzzed once more and went quiet.

That was when I knew I’d have to move to stage two of my plan.

He’d left me no other choice.

I’D HAVE TO MOVE TO STAGE TWO OF MY PLAN.

I hadn’t just been posting during those horrible first few days — I’d also been making calls.