La vida
02
Aunt Rose’s China Is Smashed Forever: The Twelve-Person Wedding Set—Goodbye to Golden Rims, ‘Made in Germany’ on Every Dish, and a Lifetime Waiting for the Right Occasion, All Gone with One Fall from the Loft—Why Do We Save Our Best Until It’s Too Late?
So, listen to this Aunt Ruth’s china set is done for. Completely smashed. It was her wedding china
La vida
02
After the Car Crash That Left Me Hospitalized, My Mother-in-Law Brought My Little Boy to Visit; He Quietly Handed Me a Bottle of Orange Juice and Whispered: “Gran Said You Should Drink This, But She Told Me Not to Say Any More”—The Chilling Truth That Followed Left Me Horrified
After the accident, I was lying in hospital when my mother-in-law turned up with my little boy;
La vida
04
I Felt Ashamed to Attend My Son’s Wedding in My Old Clothes; Many Guests Whispered and Laughed at Me in Church, But What My Future Daughter-in-Law Did Shocked Everyone
I felt embarrassed to attend my own son’s wedding, knowing full well that my clothes were old and worn.
La vida
029
“What Do You Think You’re Doing? This Is My Home! Your Son and I Divorced Three Years Ago!” — A Woman Shouts in Shock as Her Former Mother-in-Law Arrives with a Locksmith and Tries to Break Into Her Flat
“What on earth do you think youre doing? This is my home! Your son and I divorced three years ago!”
La vida
01
I Gave a Homeless Man and His Dog a Hot Meal, and the Very Next Day the Police Came to My Door: “You Poisoned Someone, We Have to Arrest You”
You wont believe what happened to me at work the other day. So, Im a chef in this inviting little café in York.
La vida
016
For years, my mother and I had a difficult relationship, but I never imagined things would go this far. I have two children—a nine-year-old girl and a six-year-old boy. I’ve raised them alone since my separation, and despite being responsible, hardworking, and a very caring mum, my mother always insisted I was “not fit to be a mother.” Whenever she visited, she’d check everything—from looking in my fridge, hunting for dust, scolding me if the clothes weren’t folded as she liked, or if the children weren’t perfectly quiet while she was there. Last week, she came round to “help” because my son had a cold, saying she’d stay for two days. One afternoon while she was out shopping, I was searching for a receipt in the TV stand cupboard… and that’s when I saw it: a thick black notebook with a red divider. I thought it was mine—one of the ones I use to jot down expenses—but it wasn’t. The handwriting inside was hers. And on the first page, it said: “Record—just in case legal action becomes necessary.” I turned the page…and saw exact dates with things she considered my “irresponsibilities.” For example: • “3rd September: the children ate reheated rice.” • “18th October: the girl went to bed at 10pm—too late for her age.” • “22nd November: clothes waiting to be folded in the living room.” • “15th December: saw her looking tired—not suitable for raising children.” Everything I did, every detail of my home—absolutely everything—she wrote down as if it were a crime. And there were things that were completely made up: “29th November: left the child alone for 40 minutes.” That never happened. What’s even worse: there was a section called “Backup plan.” She’d listed the names of aunts who could “confirm” that I lived under stress—something they’d never said. There were printed messages of me asking her not to come round unannounced because I was busy—she was keeping them as “evidence” that I “refused help.” There was even a paragraph stating that if she could “prove” I was a messy or disorganised mother, she could apply for temporary custody of the children “for their safety.” When she got back from the shop, I was shaking. I didn’t know whether to confront her, to stay silent, or to run. I carefully put the notebook back where I found it. That same evening, she made an apparently innocent remark: “Perhaps the children would be better off with someone more organised…” That’s when I realised the notebook wasn’t a spur-of-the-moment idea—this was a plan. Organised. Calculated. Deliberate. I didn’t tell her I’d seen it. I know if I do, she’ll deny everything, accuse me, turn it all against me—and only make things more dangerous. I don’t know what to do. I’m scared. And I’m hurt to my core.
For years, my relationship with my mother had always been uneasy, but I could never have imagined things
La vida
03
My Daughter Stopped Speaking to Me a Year Ago After Leaving Home to Live With a Man I Knew Was Wrong for Her—Unstable, Moody, and Always Making Excuses Not to Work. She Told Me I Didn’t Understand and That Life With Him Would Be Different. That Was Our Last Conversation Until She Called Me in Tears Two Weeks Ago After He Threw Her Out, Admitting She Was Ashamed to Admit I Was Right, and Begging Not to Spend Christmas Alone—Now She’s Back Home With Just a Small Bag and a Broken Heart, and This Christmas, She Won’t Have to Be Alone.
My daughter stopped speaking to me a whole year ago. She left home to live with a man I simply couldn’
La vida
04
After Christmas Dinner at the Gables: The Heiress Under the Bed, The Fiancé’s Chilling Plot, and How Clara Vance Turned a High-Society Wedding into the Ultimate British Revenge
After our Christmas meal finished, I squeezed underneath the guest bed, plotting to surprise my fiancé.
La vida
05
It Took Me Sixty-Five Years to Truly Understand: The Greatest Pain Isn’t an Empty House, But Living Among People Who No Longer See You – My Name Is Helen, and This Is How I Learned That True Loneliness Is Being Overlooked in Your Own Family
It took me sixty-five years to truly understand. The greatest pain is not to find your house empty.
La vida
08
THINK I OVERREACTED? … — Who even needs you, you old hag? You’re just a burden to everyone. Shuffling around, stinking up the place. If it were up to me, I’d get rid of you… But I have to put up with you. I hate you! Polly nearly choked on her tea. She’d just been chatting to her gran, Grace, over a video call. Grace had popped out for a minute. “Hang on, love, I’ll be right back,” she’d said, creaking out of her armchair and into the hallway. Her phone was left on the table, camera and mic still on. Polly, meanwhile, was busy on her computer. And then… it happened. An angry voice, echoing from the hallway. Polly thought she misheard—until she glimpsed the phone. Judging by the sound of the door, someone had entered the room. Strange hands appeared on-screen, then a side profile and a face… It was Olivia. Her brother’s wife. Yup, that was definitely her voice. Olivia marched up to Gran’s bed and lifted the pillow, then the mattress, rummaging underneath. “She just sits here, slurping her tea… If only she’d hurry up and die already, honestly. What’s the point of dragging it out? Useless, taking up space and sucking in air…” the sister-in-law grumbled. Polly froze. For a few seconds, she forgot to breathe. Soon, Olivia left, never noticing the camera. A few minutes later, Grace came back. She smiled, but the smile never reached her eyes. “There we go, I’m back! By the way, I never asked—how’s work, darling? All okay?” Gran asked, acting as if nothing had happened. Polly nodded stiffly, still reeling from what she’d heard—her every instinct screaming to storm over and throw that nasty woman out right now. Grace had always seemed like a formidable lady to Polly. Never raised her voice, just had that teacher’s firmness refined over decades in classrooms, talking to kids and parents alike. She’d taught English Literature for forty years. The children adored her—she made the classics come alive. When Granddad died, she didn’t crumble, but her perfect posture sagged a bit. She went out less, got ill more often. Her smile wasn’t as wide. And yet, Grace’s spark remained. She always believed every age had its silver lining, and enjoyed life even now. Polly loved her gran for making her feel safe. With Gran, nothing ever seemed hopeless: she’d solve any problem. Once, Grace sold her holiday cottage to help her grandson with uni fees, and gave Polly her last savings towards a mortgage. When Polly’s brother Greg and Olivia, after their wedding, moaned about the cost of renting, Gran offered up her spare rooms herself. “It’s a three-bed, plenty of space, and you’ll be around if my blood pressure goes up or my sugar dips.” “I get lonely, anyway. And you young ones might as well have a hand,” she said cheerily. Greg was supposed to look after Gran, while Polly helped with groceries, meds, and bills. She had a decent salary, and her conscience wouldn’t let her ignore Gran’s needs. Sometimes she gave cash, sometimes bank transfers, sometimes brought food instead, knowing how Gran liked to squirrel money away “for a rainy day.” Polly bought her fish, meat, milk, fruit—everything needed for a proper diet. “It’s your health, Gran. Especially with your diabetes,” Polly would remind her. Gran always thanked her, looking away as if embarrassed to be “bothering” anybody. From day one, Polly had found Olivia slippery—overly sweet words, fake politeness, but cold, hard eyes. Always sizing people up, never a hint of warmth or respect. But Polly didn’t meddle—it wasn’t her place. She just checked in, “Everything all right, Gran?” “All’s well here, love,” Grace would assure her. “Olivia cooks, keeps the house tidy. She’s young, there’s a learning curve, but she’ll get there.” Now Polly realised it was all a lie. On the surface, Olivia was a meek little lamb—but when no one was looking… “Gran, I heard all of it… What on earth was that about?” Grace froze for a moment, then looked away. “Oh, it was nothing, love,” Gran sighed. “Olivia’s just under stress, what with Greg away on shifts all the time. She gets snappy.” Polly squinted, suddenly seeing her gran as if for the first time—every new wrinkle jumping out at her, the brightness gone from Grace’s eyes. The same quiet stubbornness remained… but now, she also saw something different. Fear. “Snappy? Gran, did you actually hear what she said to you? That wasn’t just a snap. That was—” “Polly…” Grace cut her off. “I can cope, really. So she got cross—she’s young, hot-tempered. And she’s right, I am old. I don’t need much.” “Right. Gran. Please don’t treat me like a fool,” Polly snapped. “Either you tell me everything, or I’m getting in the car and coming straight over. Your choice.” Gran fell silent for several seconds, then dropped her shoulders, adjusted her glasses, her mask finally cracking. Polly was suddenly looking at a tired, frightened old lady, not the indomitable woman she’d always known. “I didn’t want to say anything,” Gran started. “You’re always so busy—why bother you with this mess? I thought it might all blow over…” It turned out Olivia’s reign of terror had gone on far longer—and been much nastier—than Polly could ever have guessed. The young couple had moved in with huge suitcases and grand plans to save for a mortgage in just six months. Gran had actually been delighted at first: laughter and footfalls filled the flat again, chats and even baking sessions in the kitchen. For a while, Olivia made an effort—baking treats, making tea for Gran, even taking her to the GP a couple of times. But after Greg left for shift work, everything changed overnight. “At first she was just irritable,” Grace told Polly. “I figured it was missing Greg. Then she started taking the food for herself—said you always brought too much anyway. Said she needed it more, being young and planning a baby. And I suppose I do need to lose a bit of weight…” Turned out, Olivia had borrowed cash from Gran—money Polly had given for medicines—and used it to buy herself a fridge, which she locked up in her room. All the nice food Polly brought ended up there. The money was never returned. Instead, Olivia began ransacking Gran’s stashes, taking even more. “She even took the telly. Said it’d ruin my eyesight,” Gran wiped away tears. “And she keeps switching off the internet. I need that for calls, for reading the news, finding recipes… Feels like prison sometimes.” “What about Greg? Did you tell him?” Polly asked. Grace shook her head. “She threatened that if I told, she’d say I was to blame for losing the baby—that I stressed her out. I don’t even know if she was ever pregnant. But she said everyone would pity her, and blame me.” Polly was boiling inside. She wanted to scream, to curse Olivia, but instead she said quietly, “Gran, no one has the right to treat you like this. No one. Not the young, not the old, not family, not strangers.” Gran broke down in tears. Polly comforted her, knowing this was it: the time for action had come. Half an hour later, Polly was in the car with her husband, heading to Grace’s. On the way she filled him in—he was stunned, but he knew her well enough not to doubt her word. Gran answered the door right away, fiddling nervously with a scrap of cloth, avoiding their eyes. “Oh, you should have phoned! I’d have put the kettle on…” “We’re not here for tea, Gran,” Polly replied evenly. “We’re here to sort this out. Where’s Olivia?” “She’s out somewhere. I don’t get told…” Grace shrugged. “Anyway, come in.” Grace stood aside and Polly made straight for the kitchen. The fridge was practically empty: a couple of cartons of sour milk, some eggs, and a jar of cucumbers growing mould. The freezer held nothing but ice. She turned to her husband, who nodded. They acted fast. Olivia’s room was locked—but the lock was cheap, easily popped with a screwdriver. Sure enough, Olivia’s fridge was inside, packed with the yogurts Polly had delivered days earlier—plus cheese, homemade sausages, even cucumbers and tomatoes. Polly seethed, but held it together. With her husband, she retreated to Gran’s room: time for a stakeout. Olivia got back half an hour later. “WHO’S BEEN IN MY ROOM?!” she screeched, clenching her fists. Polly stepped out, calm but cold. “Me.” Olivia fell silent, eyes darting. After a beat, she tried her usual nastiness. “Who do you think you are, barging into my room?” Polly strode up, towering above her shorter sister-in-law. “I’m the granddaughter of this house’s owner. And you? You’ve got ten minutes to pack, or I’ll be tossing your stuff out the window. Understood?” “I’m telling Greg!” Olivia shrilled. “Tell whoever you want! Greg’s not here. And if I have to, I’ll drag you out by your hair myself.” Olivia sneered but dashed to her room, shoving clothes into bags, swearing at Polly, who only watched with stony calm. Gran stood in the hallway, dabbing her eyes. “Polly…was that really necessary? The neighbours will hear, it’ll be a scandal…” Polly finally softened, coming over to wrap Gran in a hug. “It’s not a scandal, Gran. We’re just taking out the rubbish.” They stayed the night, filling Gran’s fridge and medicine cabinet the next day. As they left, Gran was in tears—Polly hoped not from guilt or fear of being alone. She firmly ordered Gran never to let Olivia back in, no matter what. That same day Greg called, bellowing down the phone. “Are you insane?! Olivia’s in tears! Where’s she supposed to live now? You think you can do whatever you like just ‘cause you’ve got money?” Polly hung up. Later, she sent a voice note: “You might want to get your facts straight first. Your precious Olivia was starving Gran and nicking her food—don’t forget Gran once gave you her last penny. If I see either of you near her again, you’ll regret it.” Greg said nothing more, and Polly didn’t care. Olivia moved in with a friend, posting self-pitying status updates about her “toxic in-laws.” Greg hit the like button. Polly heard nothing else from them. Grace’s flat became cosy and peaceful, if quieter. Within weeks, she asked Polly to show her how to watch TV shows on her smartphone. They started with “Pride and Prejudice,” moved on to comedies—sometimes watching together. “Oh, I’ve not laughed this much in ages,” Gran said one day. “My cheeks ache—from all the giggling!” Polly just smiled. For once, she felt true peace. Once, Gran had protected Polly; now, it was Polly’s turn to protect her Gran.
WHAT DOES IT MATTER, SHE JUST LOST HER TEMPER Who do you even think wants you, you old bat? You’