“I’m on maternity leave with two kids,” I told my husband. “You think I’m just relaxing? Trade places with me for a day.” He agreed. When I returned, the house sparkled, the kids were fed, and dinner was “ready.” For a moment I felt like the worst mom—until I noticed the socks on backward, pajama pants under a dress, a frozen casserole in a cold oven, and spit-up stains. Then I spotted my mother-in-law’s car.
She’d been there nearly all day—cooking, rocking the baby, entertaining the toddler. He admitted he couldn’t manage alone. I wasn’t angry, just hollow. That night I posted my daily schedule on the fridge—blowouts, snack battles, failed naps, grocery runs, chaos. By day five, it disappeared. A week later, he encouraged me to take a solo Saturday. I returned to a tornado scene.
“How do you do this every day?” he asked. For the first time, he truly saw me. At a barbecue, when another dad joked about maternity leave being “the easy life,” my husband stepped in: “She works more hours than you. No PTO.
Try nursing while chasing a toddler.” That healed something in me. Now, with help from a nanny and a lot of teamwork, we’re figuring it out. The most romantic words aren’t flowery—they’re “I see how hard you’re trying.”