My 6-Year-Old Asked Her Teacher, ‘Can Mommy Come to Donuts with Dad Instead? She Does All the Dad Stuff Anyway’
Ryan was always a good man. Steady, loyal, hardworking. And when our daughter, Susie, was born, we settled into roles that made sense—at first.
He worked long hours at the firm. I worked remotely, often bouncing Susie on my knee during meetings. I became the one who handled it all: the doctor’s appointments, the bedtime routines, the scraped knees, the exact way Susie liked her apples sliced. He helped occasionally—with the dog, maybe. I convinced myself it would balance out.
But it didn’t. As I climbed the ladder at work, I was also holding the household together with threads pulled taut. The invisible labor stacked up—field trips, lunches, lost socks, birthday RSVPs—all filed in my brain, running constantly like a never-ending checklist.
Ryan didn’t intend to rely on me this way. He just did. And I let him.
Every time I brought it up, his answers were the same.

“I’ll help this weekend, I promise.”
“Just remind me, babe.”
“I don’t know how you do it all.”
CONTINUE READING ON THE NEXT PAGE 🥰
How to Store and Preserve Lemongrass
What Are the Health Benefits of Prunes?
Slow Cooker Swiss Steak with Mushrooms
Juicy shrimp sautéed in buttery garlic lemon sauce just like Red Lobster, right from your kitchen.
Decoding the Viral Math Puzzle: Uncovering the Hidden Pattern
Turmeric and Lemon Drink: A Natural Elixir to Lose Weight and Cleanse the Body
Slow Cooker Cheesy Lasagna Pasta
Clean and shiny toilet, that’s the trick even 5 star hotels use
Savory Puff Pastry Bites