That night, I closed the door behind my son and his wife, taking back the keys to my apartment. I had reached my breaking point.
A week has passed since I threw out my own son and his wife. No, I don’t regret it. Not for a second. Everything that happened was inevitable. They pushed me to it. There finally came a moment when I realised—enough was enough.
I’d come home from work that evening, exhausted, as usual. Stepping inside, I froze. There, at the table, sat my son Timothy and his wife, Chloe. She was slicing ham, he was reading the paper, smiling as if nothing were amiss.
“Hello, Mum! Thought we’d pop by for a visit,” Timothy said cheerfully, as if this weren’t an invasion.

At first, I was pleased. I’m always happy when he visits. But then I realised “popping by” meant “moving in without asking.” Turns out, they’d been evicted for not paying rent. Hardly surprising. I’d warned them before—find somewhere modest, live within your means. But no! They had to have that posh flat in the city centre, all designer fittings…
“Couldn’t you have called? Given me some warning?” I asked, still reeling.
“Mum, it’s just for a bit. I’m already looking for a new place. We’ll be out in a week, promise.”
A week… Well, a week wasn’t a year. As his mother, I couldn’t say no. So I let them stay. If only I’d known how it would end—I’d have thought twice.
A week passed, then another… No sign of them leaving.
Instead, they settled in like they owned the place. Timothy stopped mentioning flat-hunting, and Chloe acted as though I owed her something.
She didn’t work. Spent her days either out with friends or sprawled on the sofa, telly blaring. I’d come home from my shift—flat in shambles, no dinner made, dishes piled up, floors sticky. And all while living off me, paying nothing for food or bills!
I tried hinting, softly: “Chloe, love, maybe find a little job? Earn some pocket money, keep busy?” She scowled and snapped:
“We’ll sort ourselves out, thanks. Butt out!”

I stood there, stunned. Walked to my room in silence and shut the door. But the resentment festered. It built, crowding out the patience I’d forced myself to keep—because I’m his mother.
Then came the breaking point.
Last Friday, I trudged home, dead on my feet. And there they were, lounging like kings. TV deafening, laughing, crisps crunching, some rubbish show on. Me? Up at six for work. I snapped.
“Mind keeping it down? Some of us have to wake early!”
Timothy barely glanced away from the screen.
“Mum, don’t start. We’ll turn it off soon.”
Chloe, glued to her phone, muttered:
“Margaret, don’t make a scene. Goodnight.”
That did it.
“Turn. It. Off. Now.”
They exchanged looks. Timothy shrugged. Chloe rolled her eyes.
That’s when I said:
“Right. You’re out tomorrow. I’m done. Sick of it.”

They protested—”We’re not in your way, Mum, you’re overreacting”—but I was past listening. I yanked out three big suitcases and started shoving their things in. Timothy tried to stop me.
“Leave now, or I call the police. I don’t owe you this. Clear?”
Thirty minutes later, they were in the hallway with their bags. I closed the door behind them, pulled their spare keys from the lock, slipped them into my pocket—and for the first time in months, I could finally breathe.
I’ve no idea where they ended up. Maybe at Chloe’s parents’ place, or with one of her many friends. Timothy’s an adult—they’ll figure it out.
As for me? I feel no guilt. I have my home back. The quiet. Rest. Freedom. And most importantly, my self-respect.
Yes, I’m a mother—but I’m not a free bed-and-breakfast, nor anyone’s maid. I’m a woman who’s earned the right to peace in her own home.
This piece is inspired by stories from the everyday lives of our readers and written by a professional writer. Any resemblance to actual names or locations is purely coincidental. All images are for illustration purposes only.