The morning of my wife Sarah’s dream job interview was supposed to be a celebration. After years of putting her career on hold to raise our daughter Sofia, this opportunity meant everything. We were nervous, excited, and determined to make the day run smoothly.
We dropped Sofia off at daycare together, exchanged a quiet moment of encouragement, and I drove Sarah to the office building where her interview was scheduled. She looked radiant—focused, hopeful, ready.
But when I returned home to grab a few things before heading to work, I found my mother-in-law, Linda, parked behind my car in the driveway. Her vehicle was deliberately angled to block mine in. I asked her to move. She refused.
“I don’t think Sarah should be working,” she said flatly. “She’s a mother. Her place is with Sofia.”
I stared at her, stunned. Linda had always been controlling, but this was next-level sabotage. I reminded her that Sarah had every right to pursue her dreams. Linda scoffed. “You’re enabling her. Someone has to stop this.”
I called a tow truck.
While waiting, I texted Sarah to let her know what happened. She was furious but told me to stay calm. “Don’t let her ruin this,” she said.
When the tow truck arrived, Linda tried to argue with the driver. I handed him the paperwork and watched as her car was hauled off the property. She screamed, threatened to call the police, and accused me of “humiliating her.”
I didn’t flinch.
Later that day, I posted a photo of Sarah holding her offer letter—she’d nailed the interview. The caption read: “Nothing stands in the way of a woman who’s ready to rise. Not even a blocked driveway.”
Linda saw the post. She didn’t speak to us for weeks. But the silence was peaceful.
Since then, Sarah’s thriving in her new role. Sofia’s happy in daycare. And Linda? She learned that manipulation has consequences.
I didn’t just move a car—I moved a boundary. And I’d do it again.