I paid for every bill and every grocery, while my husband claimed he was saving for our dream. But week after week, the fridge I filled kept emptying, and I finally had to know who was eating on my dime.
One year into our marriage, I realized I had actually married a man who could stretch a dollar like it was made of elastic. And not in a good way.
At first, I didn’t notice the shift.
Slowly, subtly, Oliver stopped contributing to anything at home.
One day, he just said, “From now on, I’m putting my money toward something important.
For us.”
☑️ I paid the bills
☑️ I bought the groceries
☑️ I restocked toilet paper, detergent, air fresheners, trash bags — you name it.
Oliver always had a reason to keep his wallet shut.
“You’re the lady of the house,” he used to say with a crooked smile. “You handle the house.
I’m thinking long-term.
For our future. Our dream.”
And so I did.
I took care of everything.
But Oliver still had opinions.
He wanted the best.
☑️ The $14 imported cheese.
☑️ Anchovies “for the flavor” in his salads.
☑️ Oh… and don’t forget the almond milk yogurt.
(The regular yogurt upset Oliver’s stomach.)
I didn’t mind, really. I earned enough, and I loved making my husband happy.
But then one day, something felt… off.
***
I opened the fridge to get the cranberry sauce I had bought just two days earlier, for a roast chicken I’d been planning, and…
It’s just gone.
“Oliver?” I called into the living room.
“Did you use the cranberry sauce?”
He didn’t even look up from his phone.
“Oh, I thought it was gravy.
I gave it to a stray dog near the garage.”
“A dog? You gave a glass jar with a cranberry on the label to a dog?”
Oliver shrugged.
“It looked hungry.”
That would’ve been that, except it wasn’t just the cranberry sauce.
☑️ Fresh fruit vanished.
☑️ A pack of ribeye steaks.
☑️ A box of organic strawberries.
☑️My lactose-free yogurt.
All gone.
When I asked, Oliver smiled like a saint.
“There’s a homeless man I’ve been helping. And I dropped some things off at a shelter, too.”
“You’ll just grab more next time, babe.
Go shopping a little earlier this week.”
“You could shop for the shelter yourself.
I’m already buying everything for us.”
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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