The Trip to Japan
My husband, Daniel, and I had been planning our 10-year anniversary trip to Japan for months. It was supposed to be *our* trip — a celebration of a decade of love, hard work, and surviving life together.
But then his mother got involved.
My mother-in-law, Linda, had struggled with arthritis for years. She’d postponed her knee surgery for over a year, claiming she didn’t want to be bedridden. But strangely — almost suspiciously — she booked the surgery… for the **exact same dates** as our trip.
“I just can’t walk anymore,” she told us dramatically. “I don’t know what I’ll do if you two aren’t here to help me.”
Daniel, being her only son, panicked. “We can reschedule,” he whispered to me, eyes guilty. “She’s in pain.”
I bit my tongue. Linda always had a flair for theatrics and a habit of *coincidentally* needing help whenever we planned something important — birthdays, holidays, even our honeymoon. But surgery? That was a new level.
Still, I didn’t want to seem heartless. We postponed the trip.
—
### **But three days before the original departure**, everything changed.
I stopped by a bakery near our house after work. As I exited with a box of melon-pan, I spotted someone across the street who looked *exactly* like Linda.
“No way,” I murmured.
But there she was — standing straight, no cane, no limp — laughing loudly with a friend while holding bags from a boutique. Not just walking… **walking with ease**.
My jaw dropped.
My brain filled with heat. Betrayal. Rage. Vindication.
She looked up at one point — and froze.
I crossed the street.
“Linda,” I said coldly.
She blinked, panicked. “Oh! Honey! I—this is—your father’s old cane was hurting my wrist—”
“Save it. You’re walking fine.”
“I… I have good days?”
“You scheduled SURGERY to sabotage our anniversary trip.”
Her friend slowly backed away.
Linda sputtered, “I—I just didn’t want you two to leave me alone! I get lonely. I thought maybe if the dates overlapped—”
“You’d guilt your son into canceling?”
She said nothing.
I took a breath. I made a choice.
“I’m telling Daniel.”
Her face drained.
—
### **That evening**
I laid out everything: the lie about not being able to walk, the sudden surgery booking, the perfect stroll across town.
He sat silently, processing. Then he whispered, “She lied to me.”
“Yes,” I said gently.
“And she ruined our trip… for nothing.”
“Yes.”
He looked up at me, eyes steady.
“Let’s go.”
“…Go?”
“Japan. The original dates. Three days from now. We’ll figure things out when we’re back. But she’s not controlling our marriage.”
I felt a swell of relief, love, and pride for him.
“But your mom—?” I asked carefully.
He shook his head. “She can explain the miraculous recovery to her surgeon.”
—
### **The next morning**
Linda called, wailing, apologizing, claiming it was a misunderstanding, begging us not to leave. Daniel calmly told her:
“Mom, I love you. But your manipulation stops today. We’re going.”
And we did.
—
### **Japan was everything we dreamed of**
Cherry blossoms. Quiet shrines. Neon city nights. Bowls of ramen that tasted like heaven. For the first time in years, we felt like a team — just us.
And the best part?
Mid-trip, Linda texted:
**“I’ve decided to postpone the surgery. Having a few good days again 😊”**
Daniel and I just laughed.
—
### **Satisfying Ending:**
When we returned home, Linda greeted us sheepishly. She apologized — a real one, not dramatic or guilt-soaked — and admitted she needed therapy for her fear of being alone.
She started going weekly.
She stopped manipulating.
And for the first time since I’d known her, Linda began learning how to let her son live his own life.