I took care of the newborn baby all by myself while my lazy husband lay on the couch yelling that dinner still wasn’t ready; one day I couldn’t take it anymore — and I decided to teach him a lesson
I don’t know what day of the week it is today. Maybe Thursday. Or Saturday. After giving birth, time stopped existing — it turned into an endless cycle of crying, exhaustion, and constant criticism.
My husband has been sitting on the couch for three hours now. One leg over the other, phone in hand, chips, the remote, and a dirty mug on the table. I’m rocking the baby.
My hands are shaking. My head is pounding. I can’t remember the last time I had a proper meal.
And yet he — my husband — once told me:
“If you don’t give me a child, I’ll leave. I need a family, and it’s your obligation.”
I believed him. I was afraid to be alone. And now… I’m alone anyway, just with a baby in my arms. He doesn’t help with anything. Even handing him the bottle is a tragedy.
When I don’t manage to cook dinner on time, he looks at me as if I’ve failed an exam:
“Can’t you handle the baby and the food at the same time? All women manage.”
All women…
That night, the baby didn’t sleep at all. He cried, arched his back, as if he was in pain. I walked around the room for an hour, two, three. I couldn’t feel my legs anymore. At some point, I realized the world was spinning. For a second, I caught my husband’s gaze — he was watching TV, switching channels, as if we didn’t exist.
“You should have calmed him down by now,” he said without even turning his head.
And that was it for me.
I felt myself falling, but I couldn’t do anything. My ears were ringing. I saw the baby slipping from my arm, but I managed to press him to my chest. The last thing I heard was my husband shouting:
“Hey! What are you doing?! Don’t you dare die here!”
I woke up in the hospital. For the first few seconds, nothing made sense. Then I saw my husband standing over me, phone in hand. He looked annoyed.
“Can you get back to your duties now?” he said without even greeting me. “I’m hungry. And your child won’t stop screaming.”
YOUR child. Not “our.”
He didn’t ask how I felt. He didn’t ask what had happened. He was just waiting for me to start serving him again.
And that’s when my patience snapped — and I did something I don’t regret for a single moment. Continued in the first comment
I slowly sat up, looked him straight in the eyes, and said:
“No. I can’t. And I won’t.”
He frowned, as if he didn’t understand.
I continued:
“I’m filing for divorce. And the court will decide that we must share all responsibilities. A few days each week, the baby will live with you. Yes, you’ll finally learn what it’s like to change diapers at night and listen to nonstop crying.”
He exhaled sharply:
“What kind of nonsense is that? You’re not going anywhere!”
“You’re wrong,” I replied calmly. “I’ll finally have time to rest. To sleep. To live. And you will have the obligation to be a father — not a decorative piece lying on the couch.”
His face went pale.
“And one more thing,” I added as I stood up, “I won’t forget child support. Or your share of the property. You’re going to regret this — not because I’m leaving, but because of how you treated me all these months.”
For the first time in months, I felt like I could breathe again.


