14/05/2026
Found this on FB. Have a look… it’s a good story to read:
„
This time Anna didn’t explode over something trivial. This was the last straw - the point where a person no longer speaks, but screams with every ounce of exhaustion left in them.
“Enough! I can’t do this anymore! Mum, do you realize you could have burned us all alive?!” Her voice cut through the kitchen so sharply that Mark ran in before he even smelled the burning plastic.
On the stove lay something that, just a few minutes earlier, had been an electric kettle. Beside it stood her mother - small, lost, dressed in an old bathrobe - looking at her daughter as though she truly didn’t understand why anyone was yelling at her.
Anna held the ruined kettle in her hands, and in her eyes there was not so much anger as something far worse.
Complete helplessness.
“She put an electric kettle on the gas stove!” Anna was almost choking on the words. “She just picked it up and put it there because she wanted tea! What if we hadn’t been home? What if the kids had been alone? That’s it, Mark. I’m done. Tomorrow I’m arranging a place for her in a nursing home.”
Her mother lowered her eyes. She didn’t argue. She didn’t explain herself. She simply turned around quietly and walked back to her room, her slippers scraping softly against the floor.
Without a word, Mark removed the melted remains of the kettle from the stove.
“Are you serious?” he asked quietly.
“Dead serious.” Anna wiped her tears with the back of her hand. “I’m not even a human being anymore. I’m like a fire watch guard. I’m afraid to leave her alone for five minutes. I don’t sleep properly. At work I think only about whether she’s turned on the gas again. Everyone keeps telling me, ‘Put her somewhere she’ll be cared for.’ And I keep clenching my teeth because of your whole ‘She’s your mother, it’s your duty.’ But I have a life too. Do you hear me? I want to live too.”
“She’s sick,” Mark said. “She’s not doing it on purpose.”
“I know that!” she shouted even louder. “And that’s exactly why it’s unbearable! If she were doing it out of spite, I could just be angry. But instead I get angry, and then I hate myself for it. I don’t have the strength to be good anymore!”
He looked at her carefully. For a long time. As though for the first time he wasn’t seeing only his wife, but a human being standing at the edge.
“Take some time off,” he said. “Go away for a week. To the seaside, to a friend’s place, wherever you want. I’ll stay here with her. Rest.”
“You don’t understand.” She shook her head. “That won’t solve anything. I’ll come back, and it’ll all start again. She’d be better off there. There people know what to do. There someone would always watch over her. And here I’m turning into a monster. I yell at her. Did you see that? I yell at my own mother.”
“I saw.”
“Then why are you against it?”
Mark placed the kettle in the sink and turned toward her.
“Because right now you’re not just looking for help. You want to remove her from your life because she’s become inconvenient.”
Anna froze.
“How can you say that?”
“I can because I see it. If you had said, ‘Let’s hire a caregiver,’ ‘Let’s turn off the gas when we leave,’ ‘Let’s arrange her room so she can’t get to dangerous things,’ ‘Let’s find a doctor, a therapist, support’ — I’d be on your side. But instead you said, ‘I’ll send her away.’ Not ‘We’ll manage.’ Not ‘I need help.’ Just: ‘I want her gone.’”
“That’s cruel,” she whispered. “You’re destroying me.”
“No. I just don’t want to one day see you make the same decision about me. Or about our children, if they ever become weak, difficult, inconvenient.”
Anna went pale.
“Don’t bring the children into this.”
“Why not? Humanity doesn’t work selectively. Either it exists in a person precisely when things become hardest, or it disappears exactly when it’s needed most.”
She sat down heavily in a chair, as if her legs had suddenly stopped obeying her.
“So you’d leave me over this?”
“If your mother leaves this house not because it’s truly safer for her elsewhere, but because you want to get rid of the burden — then yes. I’ll leave too.”
“You’ve lost your mind…”
“Maybe. But I couldn’t live beside someone who calls exhaustion a justification for betrayal.”
Anna covered her face with her hands. Now she wasn’t shouting anymore. She was quietly crying.
“I’m not a traitor,” she said through tears. “I just can’t do this anymore. I’m afraid I’m losing my mind myself.”
Mark stepped closer and answered much more gently:
“And that’s the truth. You’re exhausted. Terribly exhausted. And you need help. But your mother is not guilty because her mind is fading. She didn’t choose this. Just like a child doesn’t choose helplessness. Just like old age never asks permission before it arrives.”
Silence fell over the apartment. Only the faint creak of a bed could be heard from behind her mother’s door.
“So what am I supposed to do?” Anna asked hollowly. “Just grit my teeth again and endure it?”
“No,” Mark said. “Not suffer through everything in silence. Change the house. Turn off the gas when we’re out. Buy an ordinary metal kettle with a whistle. Install detectors. Ask for help. Cry when it’s hard. Rest. But don’t erase her as though she were some old, useless object.”
Anna sat motionless for a long while. Then she stood up, took an old metal kettle from the cupboard, and filled it with water.
“She just wanted tea, didn’t she?” she whispered.
Mark nodded.
A few minutes later, Anna knocked on the door to her mother’s room. Not loudly. Carefully.
“Mum… I brought you some tea.”
And for the first time that evening, there was no longer only exhaustion in her voice.
There was shame.
And behind it, something very much like love.
„
Have o lovely day
Blue ☺️🫐