La vida
00
Long-Awaited Happiness: Victoria’s Journey from Twelve Years of Hope to the Miracle of Adoption and the Joy of Unexpected Motherhood in England
LONG-AWAITED HAPPINESS Its strange, looking backhow the happiest day of Elizabeths life unfolded.
La vida
02
“Your Wife Is Getting Too Full of Herself. Teach Her How to Behave,” Demanded Max’s Mother-in-Law – Marina, my housewarming party’s tomorrow! I’ve invited so many people, and you know, the new flat is still completely unfurnished. Can you help me out? “Of course, Mrs. Newton,” replied Marina, though she’d planned her own relaxing weekend. And so it began: canapés for thirty guests, Caesar salad, mixed meats, a fruit arrangement, decorating the lounge, arranging the furniture. Just imagine: on Friday evening, instead of a romantic dinner with her husband, Marina made a trip to Tesco. Saturday from six in the morning meant prepping food… in someone else’s home. “Max, at least help me set out the chairs!” Marina pleaded with her husband. “But you know better what looks nice,” he shrugged, scrolling through his phone. By three o’clock, Mrs. Newton’s flat was transformed: a lavish buffet in the lounge, everything beautifully arranged, flowers set out just so. Marina looked at her work and felt utterly drained. The first guests arrived promptly at four: Mrs. Newton’s colleagues, neighbours from her old house, girlfriends. Everyone embraced the hostess, admired the flat, and handed over glittery housewarming gifts. Marina hovered in the kitchen, slicing lemons. “Where’s your daughter-in-law?” one guest asked. “She’s busy in the kitchen, of course,” Mrs. Newton waved dismissively. “Marina! Come in and say hello!” Marina came out, smiled, greeted everyone. “Oh, your daughter-in-law is so caring!” cooed a woman in an elegant suit. “You can see she’s got golden hands!” “Yes, I’ve brought up Marina well,” Mrs. Newton laughed smugly. “Now I have a dependable helper.” And then… things got even more interesting. There wasn’t a chair for Marina. “Sorry, dear Marina – you won’t have time to sit anyway,” Mrs. Newton said apologetically. “Better keep an eye on the food, serve the plates.” Marina nodded. What else could she do? So there she was, standing off to the side, almost like a waitress. Serving snacks, pouring champagne, clearing away empty napkins. Meanwhile, at the table: lively stories, laughter, toasts. “Remember, Mrs. Newton, that time at your old job—” began a colleague. Marina listened silently to their memories of a life she wasn’t really a part of. “Marina, could you refresh the fruit?” Mrs. Newton called loudly. Marina retreated to the kitchen, washed grapes, set them out on a platter. “How lovely!” the guests all cheered. “Mrs. Newton, you’ve got a real artist helping out!” “Max was so clever to choose such a homely wife!” added the woman in the suit. “I bet dinner is always ready, and the house is perfect!” Everyone laughed. Max smiled proudly too. Proud of what, exactly? Having free help around the house? But the evening wasn’t over. The table talk got freer, the guests more relaxed, voices louder. “Nina, do tell us about how Max charmed all the girls at university!” giggled one of Mrs. Newton’s old friends. “Oh, let’s not reminisce!” Mrs. Newton brushed it aside coquettishly, but she loved the attention. Everyone laughed. Max turned pink, though he was used to his mum’s boasting. Marina stood by the side table, polishing glasses. No one cared about her presence – she was part of the furniture. Useful, but invisible. “And at university, girls queued up for Max!” Mrs. Newton gushed on. “The Dean even joked, ‘Max will end up a Casanova!’ He turned out just as predicted! Before Marina, there were so many romances!” “Alright, Mum,” Max tried half-heartedly to stop her. “What’s wrong with that? Marina knows she’s not the only one,” laughed Mrs. Newton. “A man should know life! Otherwise, how will he build a family?” The woman in the suit nodded: “Exactly, Nina. It’s good for women too – a husband with experience is a blessing.” “Precisely!” Mrs. Newton agreed. “And Marina’s so calm. Not at all jealous!” All eyes turned to Marina, waiting for her to confirm she really was “calm.” Marina nodded. What alternative was there? “Marina, how did you and Max meet?” the neighbour asked cheerily. Marina opened her mouth but Mrs. Newton answered first: “At the bank! He’d just become a manager, she was a consultant. You could see straight away – a very serious and responsible girl.” Responsible. As if recommending her for a job. “I told Max: pay attention to that one. Not flighty, homely. Good for a family!” Just imagine – being described like merchandise. “Good for a family.” “And you made the perfect choice!” the woman in the suit exclaimed. “She’s a real grafter! Organised this whole housewarming, cared for everyone.” “Goes without saying,” Mrs. Newton confirmed. “I could tell straight off she was fit for family life. Not like today’s selfish girls who only think of themselves!” And now for the worst part – Max stayed silent. He didn’t protest. Didn’t say “Mum, enough.” He just sat and listened as his wife was discussed like a pedigree horse at auction. “When are the babies planned?” inevitably, someone asked. “Nina, aren’t you dreaming of grandchildren?” Mrs. Newton sighed wistfully: “I’d love some! But young people keep putting it off – work and all that. Time’s ticking!” Marina felt her cheeks burn. This topic stung. She and Max had been trying for nearly two years. She’d been seeing doctors, taking vitamins. So far everything looked fine, but every month brought fresh disappointment. “Well, it’s their private business,” said the neighbour tactfully. “Of course!” Mrs. Newton agreed. “But I hint every week – it’s time! Years go by, I want grandbabies!” Marina pressed her lips together. Hinted? She asked every week: “Any good news yet?” And Marina always blushed and mumbled apologies. “And maybe they’re not ready?” suggested another guest carefully. “Not ready?!” Mrs. Newton scoffed. “We were already having kids at their age! This new idea of not being ready… maternal instinct hasn’t disappeared!” Marina drifted over to the window. “Marina, dear!” called Mrs. Newton. “Don’t mope – come here, we’re discussing important things!” Marina stood beside Max’s armchair. “Just look at Max’s docile wife,” Mrs. Newton went on. “You ask – she delivers. Not like some modern girls, always complaining.” “And what rights does a wife have?” the woman in the suit mused. “Main thing’s keeping your husband happy and the family thriving.” “That’s right!” another guest agreed. “Women’s happiness is in their family and children.” Marina heard their talk grow tighter inside her. They spoke about her, not to her. “Nina, remember Max’s first serious girlfriend?” one guest piped up. “I think her name was Jenny?” “Oh, don’t remind me!” laughed Mrs. Newton. “Pretty, but what a temper! Always had to have her say, always argued. Not a wife – a punishment! I said to Max back then: ‘Son, think carefully. Do you really need such a shrew?’” Max fidgeted awkwardly but didn’t speak. “And you did right!” said the woman in the suit. “A mother knows best about her son’s match. Otherwise he’d be miserable for life!” “Marina, could you bring more ice?” Mrs. Newton asked. Marina nodded and went to the kitchen. She stood, staring at the ice cubes. Suddenly she realised: she wasn’t a guest. She was the help. Marina stood in the kitchen, bucket in hand, staring out at the evening. Lights twinkled on other balconies – people living their own lives. From the lounge came a happy chorus, someone singing karaoke. All were joining in. “Marina!” Mrs. Newton called. “Where’s the ice? And could you start the coffee?” Marina flicked the machine, grabbed the ice bucket, went to the lounge. “Here’s our little worker-bee!” the woman in the suit announced. “Marina, why so serious? Lighten up and join in!” “She’s tired is all,” Mrs. Newton waved away. “Been on her feet all day. But it’s fine – a woman must do it all. That’s how it is!” “Of course!” the neighbour chipped in. “The man must earn!” “Don’t I earn money too?” Marina asked quietly. Everyone turned. The room fell silent. “Sorry, dear?” Mrs. Newton said, baffled. “I said – don’t I earn money too?” Marina repeated, louder. Max frowned: “Marina, what’s this about?” “About Aunt Gal’s words – ‘The man earns, he deserves a break.’ Well, what about me?” The guests exchanged glances. Nobody saw this coming. “Well, you do earn, of course…” the woman in the suit said gently. “But it’s different.” “How is it different?” “Well,” she hesitated. “You’re a consultant. Max is a project manager – more responsibility.” “I see. So my job isn’t really a job? And the housework’s still mine. So I work at the office and at home. Max just works in the office, but he’s the one who gets to rest.” A heavy silence settled. “Marina, what are you saying?” Max asked, annoyed. “I’m saying,” Marina put the bucket on the table, “I spent two days preparing for this party. Shopping, cooking, decorating. And today I’ve been working non-stop. Yet not even a seat at the table for me.” “We didn’t mean—” Mrs. Newton tried to explain. “We just miscalculated.” “Miscalculated,” Marina agreed. “Didn’t think about me. Because I’m just staff here.” “Marina!” Max snapped. “Stop it!” “Stop what? Speaking the truth?” “Calm down, Marina,” a guest urged. “Just nerves.” “Enough of this show!” Mrs. Newton scolded. “Distracting people with drama!” “But it’s fine to discuss my family life with everyone? Fine to mention I haven’t had kids, fine to talk about Max’s exes?” Mrs. Newton paled. “I didn’t mean to—” “You talked about Jenny. You said good thing she left because she had opinions. And everyone agreed – good thing Max’s wife is so convenient now.” Marina looked at each person. “You know what? Jenny was right! She shouldn’t have let herself become a free helper!” “What are you talking about?” Max got to his feet. “What helper?!” “Know what I wished for today?” Marina continued, quietly. “I wished you’d say, ‘Meet my wife. She works in a bank, she’s clever and talented.’ Instead everyone said, ‘So handy. So docile. Just right for family life.’” “Marina, come on now,” Max began. “Come on? What – because you were silent! Silent when your mum called me convenient, silent when Aunt Gal lectured about a wife’s place, silent while everyone poked into my life!” Her voice shook. Tears that she’d been fighting all evening finally came. “You know what? I’m tired of being convenient!” Marina wiped her eyes. “Sorry for ruining your party. But I’m done playing the ideal daughter-in-law.” She headed for the door. “Marina, wait!” Max shouted. “Where are you going?” “On the balcony. For fresh air,” she said plainly, not stopping. “You can keep celebrating. Just without your waitstaff.” The balcony door closed. Behind it, muffled voices and music continued. Here, under the English night sky, Marina could finally be herself. She cried. Marina stayed on the balcony for more than an hour. First crying – from hurt, shame, relief. Then she dried her tears and watched the lights of London. Inside, voices continued, quieter now: Max and Mrs. Newton. “I don’t understand what’s come over her!” Mrs. Newton exclaimed. “To do that in front of everyone!” “Mum, maybe she’s got a point,” Max replied, unsure. “A point?! She shouted at her elders! Ruined our party!” Marina listened. “She did work all day, though.” “So what? In my youth, I worked too! Didn’t complain! Family means work, Max. Women must know their place.” Marina smiled bitterly. Even after everything, Mrs. Newton hadn’t understood. “Still—” “No ‘still’! You need a firm talk. Explain to her how a wife must behave. Or she’ll really get out of hand.” Marina opened the door and entered. Max and Mrs. Newton were amid dirty dishes. “A firm talk is a good idea,” Marina said calmly. They jumped. “Marina, dear,” Mrs. Newton started in a cajoling tone. “Don’t take it so to heart, we didn’t mean—” “I know,” Marina nodded. “You’re just not used to me speaking up.” “Let’s talk about it at home,” Max pleaded. “No. What started here, ends here.” Marina sat in a guest’s chair. “Max, I’m going to my parents’ tomorrow. For a week. I need to think.” “What is there to think about?” Max sounded panicked. “Whether I want to live in a family where I’m not valued.” “Don’t be dramatic, Marina.” “It’s not drama,” she said quietly. “It’s a choice. Either things change, or I change my life.” Mrs. Newton scoffed: “Young people! Straight to ultimatums!” “Max, if you care about our marriage – think it over. Not about how to ‘put me in my place’ but about why your wife cried on the balcony while your mother received congratulations.” A week later, Max came to Marina’s parents’ kitchen, nervously twisting his wedding ring. “Marina, please come home. Things will change.” Marina looked at him for a long moment. “Alright. We’ll try.” She never cried at family parties again. Because she’d learned to stand up for her right to respect.
Your wifes getting rather out of hand. You need to explain how she ought to behave, lectured Maxs mother.
La vida
08
“I’ll Be Staying With You for a While,” Announced My Mother-in-Law — But Natasha’s Response Left Her Speechless
Ill have to stay with you for a while, declared my mother-in-law. Natashas response left her speechless.
La vida
011
Returning Home Early, Zoe Overhears Her Husband’s Conversation with Her Sister—and Is Stunned
Returning home earlier than expected, Zoe overheard her husband talking with her sisterand her world
La vida
011
“I Just Want to Live for Myself and Finally Get Some Sleep,” Said My Husband as He Walked Out Three months—that’s how long the madness lasted. Three months of sleepless nights, with baby Max screaming so loudly the neighbours banged on the wall. Three months of Marina shuffling around like a zombie, eyes red and hands shaking. Meanwhile, Igor stomped about the house, grumpy as a raincloud. “Can you believe I look like a tramp at work?” he snapped one morning, staring in the mirror. “Bags under my eyes down to my knees.” Marina kept quiet. She fed the baby, rocked him, fed him again—a never-ending cycle. And Igor, her husband, was nearby, complaining instead of helping. “Hey, maybe your mum could watch him for a bit?” he suggested one evening, stretching out after his shower, fresh and rested. “I was thinking of going to my mate’s place in the countryside for a week.” Marina froze with the bottle in her hand. “I need a break, Marina. Honestly.” Igor began stuffing clothes into his gym bag. “I haven’t had a proper night’s sleep in ages.” And she—does she sleep?! Her eyelids droop, but as soon as she lies down, Max starts crying. Fourth time tonight. “It’s hard for me too,” Marina whispered. “Yeah, I get that it’s hard,” Igor waved her off, shoving his favourite shirt into the bag. “But my job’s serious; I have real responsibilities. Can’t show up to clients looking like this.” Then something strange happened. Marina saw them from the outside: her, in a stained dressing gown, hair a mess, baby wailing in her arms; and Igor, packing his suitcase, escaping. “I want to live for myself and get some sleep,” Igor muttered, not even looking her way. The door slammed. Marina stood alone in the flat with her crying son, feeling everything collapse inside. A week passed. Then another. Igor called maybe three times—asked how things were. His voice was distant, like he was chatting with an old acquaintance. “I’ll come at the weekend.” He didn’t. “I’ll definitely be there tomorrow.” Again, he didn’t show. Marina rocked her screaming baby, changed nappies, prepared formula. She slept in half-hour bursts between feeds. “Everything alright?” her friend asked. “Great,” she lied. Why did she lie? The shame. Shame that her husband had left, that she was alone with a newborn. As if things couldn’t get worse. But the real fun began at the shop—she bumped into Igor’s coworker. “Where’s your husband?” Lena asked. “Working lots.” “Figures. Men are all alike—once a baby comes, they’re always busy at work.” Lena leaned in: “Does Igor travel for work much?” “Travel?” “Well, he just went up to Manchester for that seminar, didn’t he? Showed us the pictures.” Manchester? When? Marina remembered: last week, Igor hadn’t called for three days. Said he was busy. Busy? No. Off holidaying in Manchester. Igor turned up on Saturday. With flowers. “Sorry I was gone so long. Busy at work.” “You went to Manchester?” He froze with the bouquet in hand. “Who said?” “It doesn’t matter who. Why lie?” “I’m not lying. Just thought you’d be upset I went without you.” Without her?! With a baby, she couldn’t go anywhere! “Igor, I need help. I haven’t slept in weeks.” “We’ll hire a nanny.” “With what money? You don’t give me any.” “What do you mean? I pay the rent and bills.” “And for food? Nappies? Medicine?” Silence. Then: “Maybe you could go back to work? Even part-time? No sense sitting at home. We’ll hire a nanny.” Sitting at home—as if that’s a break! Marina picked up her son, looked at Igor, and understood: he didn’t love her. Never had. “Get out.” “What?” “Go. And don’t come back until you decide what matters—your family or your freedom.” Igor grabbed his keys and left. Two days later, he texted: “Thinking.” Meanwhile, Marina didn’t sleep. And she thought too. Imagine being alone with your own thoughts for the first time in months. Her mum rang: “How are you, Marina? Igor not home?” “On a business trip.” Another lie. “Shall I come over? Help out?” “I’ll manage.” But her mum came anyway. “How’s things?” Mum looked around. “Good grief, Marina, look at yourself!” Marina glanced in the mirror. She looked a state. “And Igor?” “Working.” “At eight in the evening?” Marina was silent. “What’s going on?” And Marina broke down. Really, like a child—loud and desperate. “He left. Said he wants to live for himself.” Mum was silent. Then: “What a bastard. Utter bastard.” Marina was stunned—her mum never swore. “I always thought Igor was weak. But this much…” “Mum, maybe I’m wrong? Should I have been more understanding?” “Marina, isn’t it hard for you?” That simple question made Marina realise: she’d only ever worried about Igor. His tiredness, his comfort. Never about herself. “What should I do?” “Live. Without him. Better on your own than with someone like that.” Igor came back Saturday. Tanned. Clearly “thinking” at his mate’s place. “Can we talk?” “Alright.” They sat at the table: “Look, Marina, I know it’s hard for you. But it’s not easy for me either. Can we agree? I’ll send money and visit. Just need to live separately for now.” “How much?” “What?” “Money. How much?” “Well, ten thousand.” Ten thousand. For a child, food, medicine. “Igor, get lost.” “What?!” “You heard me. Don’t come back.” “Marina, this is business!” “Business? You want freedom? Where’s mine?” Then Igor said the line that changed everything: “What freedom do you have? You’re a mother!” Marina looked at him—this was the real Igor. An immature, self-centred man who thought motherhood was a life sentence. “I’ll file for child support tomorrow. A quarter of your salary. By law.” “You wouldn’t dare!” “I would.” He stormed out, slamming the door. For the first time, Marina felt she could breathe easier. Max cried. But she knew now: she’d manage. A year passed. Igor tried coming back twice. “Marina, shall we give it another go?” “Too late.” Igor whined that Marina was a “hard cow.” She didn’t care. Marina hired a nanny and started working as a nurse. At the hospital, she met Dr. Andrew. “Any children?” “A son.” “And Dad?” “Living for himself.” She introduced them. Andrew brought toy cars for Max. They played and laughed together. Soon, the three of them were always out at the park. Igor found out and called: “The kid’s only a year old, and you’re out with other men!” “And what? Should I wait for you?” “But you’re a mother!” “Yes, I am. So?” He never called again. Andrew was different. When Max got sick, he was there. When Marina was exhausted, he took them to his cottage in the country. Now Max is two. He calls Andrew “Uncle.” He doesn’t remember Igor. Igor’s remarried. Pays child support. Marina doesn’t resent him. She’s living for herself now too. And it’s wonderful.
I just want some time for myself and a proper night’s sleep, my husband said as he packed his bag
La vida
06
Handing Over the Keys to Our Cottage: When a Generous New Year’s Offer to Friends Ended in Chaos, Unexpected Costs, and the End of a Friendship
Hand us the keys to your cottage, and well stay there for a bit, the request came. Simons mother had
La vida
06
Yesterday I Quit My “Job” as Grandma—No Notice, No Paperwork: I Simply Set Down the Birthday Cake, Grabbed My Bag, and Walked Out of My Daughter’s House My “employer” was my own daughter—Charlotte. For years, I believed my pay was love. But yesterday I realised: in our family economy, my love isn’t worth much next to brand-new tablets. I’m Anne, I’m 64—retired nurse, living on a modest pension in the suburbs, but in reality I’m the driver, cook, cleaner, home tutor, counsellor, and on-call “ambulance” for two grandsons, Max (9) and Daniel (7). I’m what you’d call the village—the community that’s meant to raise a child, except now the “community” is usually one exhausted grandma surviving on coffee, valerian, and painkillers. Charlotte works in marketing; her husband, Andrew, in finance. Nice people—or so I kept telling myself. Nursery’s expensive, school is tricky, clubs are harder, so when Max was born, they looked at me like drowning people. “Mum, we can’t afford a nanny,” Charlotte sobbed. “And we don’t trust strangers. Only you.” So I agreed—not wanting to be a burden, I became the foundation. My days start at 5:45am: I make porridge (not the “quick” kind Denny refuses), get the kids ready, drive to school, clean floors I didn’t dirty, scrub toilets I didn’t use, ferry them to clubs—English, football, homework. I’m Grandma Routine. Grandma “No”. Grandma Rules. There’s also Susan—Andrew’s mum. She lives by the seaside in a new apartment with a facelift, a new car, endless holidays. She pops in twice a year; doesn’t know Max’s allergies, or how to calm Daniel when maths sends him into meltdown. She’s never scrubbed sick off a car seat. Susan’s Fun Grandma. Yesterday Max turned nine. I’d spent weeks preparing—little money, but I wanted my gift to be special. I’d spent three months knitting him a heavy blanket, his favourite colours, to help him sleep. I baked a real cake. At 4:15pm, Susan swept in—a cloud of perfume and shopping bags. “Where are my boys?!” My grandsons pushed past me to greet her. She perched on the sofa, pulled out the branded bag. “I didn’t know what you liked, so I got the newest thing,” she declared—two top-of-the-range gaming tablets. “No limits today—my rules!” The kids lost the plot. Cake and guests forgotten. Charlotte and Andrew beamed. “Is it really necessary…” Andrew said as he poured her wine. “You spoil them.” I stood there holding my blanket. “Max, I brought you something too…and I baked a cake.” He didn’t look up. “Not now, Grandma, I’m beating a level.” “I spent all winter knitting…” He sighed. “No one wants blankets anymore, Grandma. Susan brought tablets. Why are you always so boring—just food and clothes?” I glanced at Charlotte, waiting for her to help. She laughed awkwardly: “Mum, don’t be upset. He’s just a kid. Of course the tablet’s more fun. Susan’s the ‘fun grandma’. You’re…you know…you’re our everyday.” Everyday Grandma. Like everyday dishes, everyday traffic. Needed, but invisible. “I want Susan to live here,” Daniel announced. “She doesn’t make us do homework.” That’s when something snapped. I folded up the blanket, set it on the table, hung up my apron. “Charlotte, I’m done.” “What do you mean—cut the cake?” “No. I’m done.” I picked up my bag. “I’m not a machine you just switch off. I’m your mother.” “Mum, where are you going?” she cried. “My presentation’s tomorrow! Who’ll pick up the kids?” “I don’t know. Maybe sell a tablet. Or let Fun Grandma stay.” “But we need you!” I paused at the door. “That’s just it. You need me—but you don’t see me.” I walked out. This morning, I woke at 9. Made coffee. Sat on my porch. And for the first time in years, my back didn’t ache. I love my grandsons. But I refuse to live as free labour masquerading as “family”. Love isn’t self-destruction, and a grandma isn’t just a resource. If they want Grandma Routine, they better respect the routine. For now… maybe I’ll join a dance class. Isn’t that what “fun grandmas” do?
Yesterday, I quit my job. No resignation letter, no obligatory two weeks notice. I simply placed a plate
La vida
06
The Bride Stood Frozen When She Saw Who Walked Into Her Wedding — “Is That Really You?” She Cried, Stunned. In a Grand English Banquet Hall Adorned with Glittering Chandeliers, Surrounded by the Elite, Her World Changed Completely When Her Long-Lost Little Brother Arrived Unexpectedly, Dressed in Rags. Amidst Awkward Whispers and Disapproval, She Embraced Him as Family, Finding the Missing Piece of Her Heart and Learning That True Wealth Lies in Love, Not Appearances.
The bride was left completely gobsmacked when she saw whod just turned up at her wedding. It cant be you!
La vida
08
“You Lied to Me!”: Heartbreak, Hope, and a Miracle – The Story of Antonina, Who Was Told She Would Never Be a Mother, Lost Her Marriage, and Found Love, Family, and the Impossible in England
You lied to me! Nicholas bellowed, standing in the middle of the sitting room, his face an alarming shade
La vida
021
He Chose His Wealthy Mother Over Me and Our Newborn Twins—But One Night, He Turned on the TV and Saw Something He Never Expected
He chose his wealthy mother over me and our newborn twins. Then, late one night, he switched on the television