Go Back to Your Mother – My Husband Ordered as He Threw Out My Bags

**Diary Entry**

Today was unbearable. *»Go back to your mother,»* James ordered, shoving my bags into the hallway.

*»Mum, stop calling him,»* I said, setting my teacup down with a sigh. *»James is at workhes in a meeting.»*

*»A meeting, is it?»* Mum pursed her lips. *»I know all about these meetings. Wasnt he at one yesterday when he rolled in at midnight? You could smell the whiskey on him from a mile off.»*

I rubbed my temples. Ever since James and I moved in with herjust temporarily, while our flat was being renovatedevery morning started like this. Two months in, and the end was nowhere in sight.

*»Mum, please,»* I said, forcing calm. *»You promised not to interfere.»*

*»Im not interfering,»* she sniffed, setting her phone aside. *»I just worry. Youre working yourself to the bone while hes out gallivanting. What sort of man does that?»*

*»A good one,»* I snapped, standing. *»And he wasnt gallivanting. It was a client dinnerI told you.»*

Mum scoffed but dropped it. That lookshe never believed a word.

*»Im going to work,»* I muttered, grabbing my bag. *»Back by eight.»*

*»Youll miss lunch. I made a roast.»*

*»No time. Meeting at one, then a client.»*

*»Youre always starving yourself,»* she tutted. *»No wonder youre not pregnant. Hows a baby supposed to grow on an empty stomach?»*

I exhaled sharply. The *baby* topicalways a sore spot. Five years married, no grandchildren. *Unacceptable.*

*»See you tonight,»* I said, kissing her cheek. *»James promised hed be home early. Well have dinner together.»*

*»If he comes home,»* she muttered.

The hallway smelled of damp and old carpeta scent from childhood that once felt cosy, now just suffocating.

In the car, I called James. *»Did Mum ring you again?»*

*»Three times. I ignored it.»*

*»Sorry. Shes just worried.»*

*»Worried?»* He laughed bitterly. *»She monitors every move. Last night, it was an interrogationwhere was I, who was I drinking with, why so late? Im not a teenager, Emily!»*

*»I know,»* I said, starting the engine. *»Just hang on a little longer. The contractor said the bathrooms done this week, then just the kitchen. Well be home soon.»*

Silence. Then, quieter: *»What if I dont want to go back?»*

*»What do you mean?»*

*»Never mind. See you at work.»*

The line went dead. My stomach twisted. Did he mean our flat? Or… *us?*

Work dragged. I messed up numbers in a meeting, forgot key contract points with a client. James was out on-site all day.

I got home late, past nine. The flat was silent, just the telly murmuring from the kitchen.

*»Im home!»* No answer. Oddusually, Mum would hover, asking about my day.

Then I saw them: Mum and James at the table, tension thick. She stared at the telly, ignoring him. He spun a cold teacup in his hands.

*»Whats going on?»*

James looked up, icy. *»Ask your mother. Shes been tearing into me for half an hour.»*

Mum sniffed. *»Just told him the truth. Not a real mancant even provide. Living off his mother-in-law like some layabout.»*

*»We *have* our own place!»* I cried.

*»A shoebox in some high-rise,»* she waved off. *»In my day, men built homes. This one? Some project manager»*

*»Senior project lead,»* James ground out. *»And I earn enough. Were only here because of the *renovation*.»*

*»Five years, and whatve you got?»* Mum went on. *»No kids, no proper home. Wife working like a dog while you»*

*»Enough!»* I shouted. *»We agreedno pressure, no baby talk!»*

Mums lips thinned. *»I only want whats best. Youre thirty-twotimes ticking.»*

I sat beside James, took his hand. He didnt pull away, but didnt squeeze back.

*»She thinks Im a failure,»* he said quietly. *»Always has.»*

I didnt argue. Shed opposed our marriage from the start. *»No prospects,»* shed said. *»Five years youngerstill a boy.»*

Later, in bed, James held me. *»I love you. But I cant live like this. Shes driving me mad.»*

*»Me too,»* I admitted. *»I just… didnt see it until now.»*

Morning came. James left early. Mum sat at the table, tea untouched.

*»Your prince run off?»* she said.

*»Stop. Hes my husband. You *have* to respect him.»*

*»Respects earned. Your father was a *real* man. Leaky tap? Fixed it himself. This one calls a plumber.»*

Work was a blur. James texteda new flat, photos of a bright two-bed. I felt… nothing but dread.

That evening, my bags were packed, waiting in the hall.

*»Ive sorted your things,»* Mum said, voice brittle. *»If youve forgotten anything, fetch it later.»*

James appeared in the doorway, jaw tight. *»Go back to your mother. If shes packed your bags, its decided.»*

*»Nothings decided!»* I cried. *»She was just helping»*

*»Helping?»* He laughed coldly. *»Shes throwing you out. Your *things* are by the door, Emily.»*

Mum burst into tears. *»Go with him! Leave me! I *know* Im not wanted!»*

I hugged her, frantic. James watched, stony.

*»Choose,»* he said. *»Come with me, or stay. But if you stay, its for good. I wont play these games anymore.»*

*»Games?»*

*»Shes manipulating you. And you let her. You always will, under her roof.»*

Mum lifted her head, triumphant. *»See, love? Hes trying to take you from me!»*

I looked between themthe two people I loved most, waiting for me to pick.

*»I… cant decide right now,»* I whispered.

*»There *is* no time,»* James said. *»Ive paid the rent. We go now, or I go alone. Forever.»*

Mum glared. *»Dont you dare give her ultimatums in *my* house! Shes *my* daughter!»*

*»Shes my *wife*,»* James shot back. *»And Ill fight for my family.»*

I stepped back, heart pounding. One clear thought cut through the fog: *This never ends.* If I stayed, shed control everything. If I left, James would never forgive her.

*»Im staying,»* I said softly.

James flinched like Id struck him. *»What?»*

*»Mum needs me. We can wait… just until the renovations done.»*

Mum smirked. *»A daughter chooses her mother.»*

*»Go back to her, then,»* James said, shoving my bags into the hall. *»But dont wait for me. Im done.»*

He left. Mum clutched my arm. *»Let him go. Weve managed without him before.»*

I signed the divorce papers two weeks later. The flat was finished a month after thatempty. Too painful to visit. I rented it out.

New job, new routines. Mum softened, strangely. Less cutting. Maybe afraid shed lose me, too.

Sometimes, at night, I wonder: *What if Id left with him?*

But life doesnt do *what-ifs*. The choice was made. Now I walk this pathlearning to live without him. Without blame.

What comes next? Only time will tell.

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Go Back to Your Mother – My Husband Ordered as He Threw Out My Bags
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