She Dreams of Freedom in Retirement, and We’re No Longer Against It.

She dreams of freedom in retirement, and we no longer oppose her.
The motherinlaw wanted a spacious life after retiring now we no longer bother her.
Sometimes fate plays such odd tricks that it becomes hard to tell truth from cruel irony. I never imagined that after twelve years living together under my motherinlaws roof, when everything seemed stable and clear, our family would face a moral ultimatum: pay up or leave.
Right after our wedding, Élodie Dubois offered my husband and me to move into her roomy threeroom flat in the heart of Paris, while she happily settled into my tiny studio in the suburbs. We were thrilled: central living, good conditions, and the blessing of my motherinlaw what more could a young couple ask for?
We poured our wedding money into renovations: from floor to ceiling the apartment was like new, with a modern kitchen, refurbished bathroom, brandnew parquet, and a small relayout of the rooms. When my motherinlaw came to admire the result, her eyes lit up. Its beautiful here! Youve done a great job! compliments poured in at every visit. As a thankyou we took care of all her rental expenses. Relieved, she often thanked us, even saying she could set aside a bit of money thanks to her pension. Honestly, throughout those years we never regretted the arrangement.
Then the children arrived: first a boy, then a girl. As the family grew, we began to dream of a real home of our own. We saved for a larger place, because a fourroom flat was out of reach. We didnt tell Élodie, hoping to handle it quietly when the time came.
Everything changed when she retired. The joy of freedom quickly gave way to complaints: How can I live on such a meager pension? Retirees, the government doesnt care! We did what we could grocery trips, medication, little helps. Then, one afternoon over tea, she dropped a sentence that left my husband speechless.
My dear, youre living in my apartment after all. So, shall we start talking about rent? Lets say a thousand euros a month?
My husband was stunned. After a moment he replied:
Mom, are you serious? We already pay your bills, your groceries, your life costs almost nothing. And now you want rent?
Her answer was blunt:
In that case, well swap again! I want my apartment back!
We realized it was blackmail harsh, direct, utterly ungrateful. What she didnt know was that we already had enough for a downpayment on our own place. We listened in silence, then that very night decided it couldnt go on.
A few days later we arrived with a pie not to apologise but hoping shed reconsider. As soon as the topic came up she said:
So, is that settled? Or are you going to cram yourselves into my place?
Our patience snapped.
Élodie, I said calmly, we wont cram anywhere. You take back your apartment, and we will claim our independence.
And with what money, I ask you? she retorted.
My husband cut her off:
Well manage. Its no longer your problem. Remember, Mom, you chose this. You wanted to live alone in your threeroom flat? Youll have it.
Things moved fast. We found a new home, secured a loan, dipped into our savings and sold my studio to lower the monthly payments. Three weeks later our boxes were packed.
Today, Élodie lives again in her renovated apartment the one she loved so much only to discover shell be alone there. She now complains to the neighbours about poor workmanship and ungrateful children, pays her own bills, carries her groceries, and finally tastes the bitter flavor of a retirement without assistance.
As for us, we reside in a modest fourroom place, but we are free morally and physically. No more accounts to settle, no fear of crises or new demands. We have turned the page.
As the proverb goes: You reap what you sow. This time, however, were not the ones footing the bill.

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She Dreams of Freedom in Retirement, and We’re No Longer Against It.
Dagen före nyårsafton gick jag och mamma in på “Barnens Hus”… Och jag förälskade mig direkt i en klänning där: röd, stickad, med klarblå kant nertill och vid ärmarna. Vi skulle bara köpa något smått – kanske julgransglitter eller ljusslingor… Men jag stod på mig och bad mamma om att få prova klänningen. Den satt som sydd för mig, och jag började drömma om hur killen jag gillade i klassen skulle se mig i den på skolans nyårsfest. Jag stod där med tårarna i ögonen och ville knappt ta av mig klänningen. Mamma märkte det och sa: “Jag får lön snart, vi tar den.” Hem åkte jag överlycklig. Vi pyntade lägenheten och klädde granen. Men i kylskåpet fanns bara lite smör och is kvar. Vi väntade på mammas lön – på den tiden jobbade man även 31 december och kom bara hem lite tidigare. När mamma kom hem hade hon tårar i ögonen – lönen var försenad. Hon skämdes för att det inte blev något festbord. Men jag var inte besviken, stämningen var ändå magisk med nyårsfilmer på TV – det fanns bara två kanaler och inget utbud som idag. Mamma kokade potatis, rörde i smör, rev morötter och sockrade – mer hade vi inte. Vi satte oss vid bordet, mamma började gråta, och snart grät jag också – inte för maten, utan för att jag tyckte så synd om mamma. Vi la oss bredvid varandra under täcket och såg på nyårskonserten. Tolvslaget kom – grannarna träffades i trapphuset med bubbel och skålade, bara vi stannade inne. Plötsligt ringde det envist på dörren – där stod grannkärringen som alltid skällde på oss: för att jag inte städade eller bråkade ute. Ganska full sneglade hon på vårt potatisbord och gick tyst. Efter tjugo minuter började någon banka på dörren. Mamma gick och öppnade, och in rullade tant Vera med kassar fulla av mat: sallader, korv, inlagd gurka, halv kyckling, godis och t.o.m. mandariner och champagne! Mamma började gråta igen, men tant Vera torkade hennes tårar, kallade henne dum och gick hem. Efter det styrde Vera som vanligt i huset, och nämnde aldrig nyårskvällen. Men när vi till slut begravde Vera såg vi att hela huset tyckte om vår ”elaka granntant” – hon hade hjälpt oss alla, var och en på sitt sätt…