Since I “don’t work,” my husband took a vacation without me, so I gave him a lesson he will never forget.

Since I “don’t work,” my husband took a vacation without me, so I gave him a lesson he will never forget.

Keith came home strutting like a game show winner, dropping his keys and announcing he was heading to a resort with his parents next week. I stood there, holding our screaming 12-week-old, running on reheated coffee and granola crumbs, while he barely looked at me. “I need a vacation,” he said, as if I’d been sipping margaritas all day. Then came the real kicker—“You don’t work, baby. You’re on maternity leave.”

So I smiled. Not because anything was funny—because I was about to teach him what “vacation” really meant. When he left, I packed up Lily and all her baby gear, emptied the fridge, paused every bill payment, and left a note: “Lily and I are on vacation too. Don’t wait up.” Then we drove to my mom’s, turned off our phones, and relaxed for two glorious days while he scrambled in chaos.

By the time I turned my phone back on, Keith was spiraling. No groceries. No power. No idea how to adult. His texts were a meltdown in real time. I let him sweat for another day, then reminded him sweetly that I was just enjoying a little break—since I apparently “don’t work.” When I finally came home, the house was a disaster, and he was a broken man. “I get it now,” he said. “I was wrong.”

I handed him a list of shared chores and told him he was on baby duty Saturday. He agreed, humbled and wiser. As I walked away, I reminded him: call motherhood a vacation again, and next time, I’m leaving the diapers with him too. He muttered to Lily, “Your mom is scary smart.” She cooed. I smiled. Lesson learned.

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