Her Mother-In-Law Put a Dog Crate at the Baby Shower-Quieen - Chainityai

Her Mother-In-Law Put a Dog Crate at the Baby Shower-Quieen

My mother-in-law gave me a gift at my baby shower.

Inside was a dog cage.

“This baby barks so much she’s just like a puppy,” she laughed.

Image

Then she opened the door and said, “This is exactly where she belongs,” trying to place my baby inside.

The room burst into laughter.

But a second later, a loud voice shouted across the room.

The entire place fell silent.

Morning light spilled across my desk that day in bright strips, catching on the pencil dust and logo sketches I had abandoned by the window.

The house smelled like coffee, lemon cleaner, and the warm plastic scent of the printer I had been fighting with since breakfast.

I was seven months pregnant, tired in places I did not know a person could be tired, and still trying to believe that one family party could happen without humiliation.

I rested my palm on my belly.

“Okay, little one,” I whispered. “We’re going to make today calm.”

My daughter kicked once, hard and certain, as if she already had opinions.

I smiled despite myself.

Calm had become rare after my pregnancy became visible.

Before that, Helen Wilson had been difficult in the way some mothers-in-law are difficult.

She commented on curtains.

She corrected recipes.

She sighed at holiday photos because Jason’s tie was crooked or my shoes were “too casual for a family card.”

I could survive that.

Most women can survive a little criticism when everyone else tells them to be polite.

But pregnancy changed something in her.

The moment she learned Jason and I were having a baby, Helen stopped acting like my mother-in-law and started acting like a supervisor assigned to fix me.

She inspected my groceries.

She texted me links about prenatal vitamins.

She told me the brand of lotion I used was wrong.

She even questioned whether I should keep freelancing from home because, according to her, “real mothers make real sacrifices.”

That one stung more than I admitted.

I had been an elementary art teacher for years before I left the classroom to become a freelance graphic designer.

I loved teaching children how to mix colors, how to draw houses bigger than trees, how to make a mess and call it discovery.

But after four years of school budgets shrinking and my pay barely moving, I built my own work slowly.

Late nights.

Tiny clients.

Unpaid revisions.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *