My son removed me from the family group chat, and when I asked him why, he said, “Mom, it was for working adults.”

My son removed me from the family group chat, and when I asked him why, he said, “Mom, it was for working adults.” A week later, all twelve of them showed up at my farm with suitcases… but the gate was locked, and a notebook was waiting for them.

My son removed me from the family group chat, and when I asked him why, he said, “Mom, it was for working adults. You don’t understand what we talk about.” A week later, all twelve of them showed up at my farm with suitcases, meat, and coolers, convinced I would leave the key under the flowerpot… but that night, by the locked gate, a sign and a notebook were waiting for them.

The gate of the farm was closed with a new chain. Not the old rusty one we always left on out of habit. A new one. Brilliant. Heavy. And hung on the gate was a wooden sign: “This house no longer receives visitors who forget to ask permission. The key is no longer under the planter. If you don’t understand why, read the notebook.”

Underneath the sign, on a folding table, sat a brown leather notebook with a red ribbon.

I was sitting on the veranda with Juan on my right and Mr. Ferrer, my lawyer, on my left. I did not hide.

Carlos was the first to furrow his face. My daughter-in-law Elena put the cooler down and looked for the planter. My daughter Laura took off her sunglasses. Diego let out a short incredulous laugh. The grandchildren stayed behind, staring.

Carlos raised his voice. “What is this, Mom?”

I said nothing.

He shook the gate. “Mom, open it. We come tired. Children are hungry.”

I looked at him the way one learns to look when no longer afraid of losing affection, because she already understood that what was given was not affection.

“I was hungry many times too, Carlos. And you never cared enough to get out of the car and knock before entering.”

Laura stepped forward. “Oh, Mom, it’s not that big of a deal. It was just a WhatsApp group.”

“No,” I replied. “It wasn’t just a group. It was the habit of talking about me as if I were not there. It was organizing in my house without asking me. It was coming with twelve people believing the old woman would have clean sheets, a full fridge, and a closed mouth.”

Elena crossed her arms. “Benita, no one wanted to offend you. You always said the farm was for family.”

I felt the name hit me like an insult. Benita. As if I were staff.

The story doesn’t end here – it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇