Business Class Lessons: A Trip That Changed Everything

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For my husband’s 35th birthday, my MIL gifted us a trip to Italy. When I saw our ticket, I realized only he and our daughter were booked in business class, while I was stuck in economy. I smirked.

But when we got to the hotel, he called his mum in a panic because his favorite suitcase was missing. That suitcase had his high-end clothes, colognes, shoes—basically all the things he liked to show off with. I quietly sat on the couch while he paced the room, repeating, “But mom, I told you to pack it.

It was next to the door.” Our daughter, 7, was curled up on the bed, playing with the tiny hotel slippers and giggling to herself. She was just happy to be there.He hung up the phone frustrated and muttered something about how nothing ever goes right unless he does it himself. I didn’t say anything.

Just nodded. This wasn’t the first time he made things feel like my fault without directly blaming me. Dinner that night was at a fancy restaurant near the Trevi Fountain.

He wore jeans and a wrinkled shirt from his carry-on. I wore a simple dress I had packed days before. He sulked the entire time.

Kept complaining about how the trip was already “off.”

I tried to lift the mood. Told our daughter stories about the coin wishes in the fountain, about Rome’s history. She was enchanted.

He scrolled on his phone, barely touching his food. Later that evening, back in the room, I asked him—gently—why I was booked in economy. He didn’t even look up.

“My mom booked it. I didn’t check.”

That was it. No apology.

No follow-up. Just “I didn’t check.”

I nodded again. The next morning, we went on a guided tour of the Colosseum.

He wore borrowed clothes from the concierge’s emergency bag and kept adjusting his sunglasses like a celebrity hiding from paparazzi. Our daughter loved it. She kept asking about gladiators and lions, wide-eyed and bouncing with every step.

While walking back to the hotel, I noticed something odd. My husband’s phone buzzed three times, and each time, he flinched. The name on the screen?

“C.”

I didn’t ask. That night, after he fell asleep, I took a walk. The streets were calm, glowing with golden light.

I sat near a gelato shop and just… breathed. There was a couple sitting nearby. Older.

Maybe in their 70s. The woman looked at me and smiled. “First time in Italy?” she asked.

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