Stories: They gave us this house. The least you can do is feed them

Every Sunday was the same.

Eight people squeezed around my dining table like it was a restaurant, not my home. I cooked, I served, I refilled drinks, I cleared plates, and I scrubbed pots until my hands burned.

No one ever offered to help.

When I finally told my husband I was exhausted, he shrugged.
“They gave us this house. The least you can do is feed them.”

That Sunday, I decided to stop fighting — but I didn’t stop planning.

When they arrived, I greeted them with warm smiles. I set the table beautifully, lit candles, and placed their favorite dishes in the center: roast chicken, creamy mashed potatoes, buttery rolls, and my famous lemon cake.

They praised the food as always.

“So good!”
“You’re such a natural hostess!”
“You’re lucky to have her,” one aunt told my husband.

I nodded politely and kept serving.

What no one knew was this: I had already packed my things.

While they ate dessert, I quietly placed a stack of papers at each place setting. When they finally leaned back, full and relaxed, I stood at the head of the table.

“Before you go,” I said calmly, “please read what’s in front of you.”

They frowned and opened the envelopes.

Inside were copies of my handwritten schedule for the past year — every Sunday meal, every grocery bill, every hour spent cooking and cleaning. Attached was a second page: a proposed rotation.

Next Sunday: Aunt Maria cooks.
The Sunday after: Uncle Paul hosts.
Then: Cousin Lily.
Then: My husband.

Silence filled the room.

My husband laughed nervously. “She’s joking.”

I wasn’t.

I placed my keys on the table.

“I’m not your caterer,” I said evenly. “If this house is a ‘thank you,’ then thank me properly — by sharing the work or stopping these lunches.”

My mother-in-law cleared her throat. “Well… we didn’t realize—”

“Exactly,” I said.

Then I added the final page: a signed lease for a small apartment I’d already secured nearby.

Gasps.

My husband went pale. “You’re leaving?”

“For now,” I replied. “Until this feels like a partnership, not servitude.”

The room erupted — apologies, excuses, tears, and guilt.

And then something surprising happened.

My mother-in-law stood up.

“You’re right,” she said quietly. “We failed you.”

Within minutes, the family agreed: rotating hosts, shared cooking, and — most importantly — no more automatic Sundays at my house.

That night, my husband helped me pack… and then unpack again when I chose to stay — this time as an equal, not a servant.

The next Sunday, I arrived at Aunt Maria’s house as a guest.

For the first time in years, I sat down… and someone else served me.

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