I FORGOT TO LEAVE LUNCH MONEY FOR MY SON, BUT HE SAID, “DON’T WORRY, MOM – I’LL LOOK IN THE CEREAL BOX WHERE DAD HIDES IT.”
I was up before sunrise, already rushing to get to my second job. I’ve been slipping up on things lately, and it’s starting to show. So, I’m halfway through my shift when my phone buzzes. It’s my son.
My heart drops — I totally forgot to leave him lunch money.
“Mom, there’s no money for lunch,” he says. He’s so patient, almost like he’s used to it. I start apologizing, holding back tears because it’s not just lunch — I’d been missing a lot lately, barely keeping us afloat.
But then he surprises me. “It’s okay, Mom. I’ll check the cereal box where Dad hides it.”
I freeze. Dad hides money? In the cereal box? I thank him and end the call, but my mind races.
As soon as my shift’s over, I rush home. I dig through the cereal box, and there it is — an envelope stuffed with cash. Not just lunch money, but enough to solve most of our problems.
By dinner, I’ve made up my mind. I casually mention we need money for car repairs, watching his reaction. He sighs, saying, “We’ll have to wait. We don’t have the money right now.” He says it so smoothly like he believes it.
Something snaps. I’ve been working like crazy while he’s sitting on this stash? The next day, I made one call.
To a lawyer.
I explained everything—how I was working two jobs, struggling to keep food on the table while my husband had a secret stash of cash. How my son, our child, knew about it before I did. How I had to beg for money while he sat on enough to solve our problems.
The lawyer listened carefully. Then he sighed and said, “You’re not the first wife to tell me this.”
That night, I confronted my husband. I held up the envelope. “What’s this?”
His face went pale. “Where did you—”
I cut him off. “Why am I killing myself while you have this?!”
He stammered. Said it was “just a little emergency fund.” But then I dropped the real bombshell.
“I called a lawyer.”
His eyes widened. “You what?”
“I’ve been breaking my back for this family while you let me suffer.” I shook my head. “I’m done.”
I wasn’t bluffing. I took my son and left. Within a month, I had filed for divorce.
And guess what? Once everything was divided, that ‘secret stash’ didn’t seem so big anymore.
But me? I felt richer than ever.