My MIL Sabotaged Every Job Interview I Got – I Had Enough & Brought Her Back Down to Earth

Just when I thought having my mother-in-law visit would be good for my wife, it turned into a disaster. Catherine, my wife’s mom, moved in with us “for a few months.” At first, I didn’t mind. Rachel was happy to have her around, and I figured it might be good for her while I focused on job interviews. We were in a tough spot—Rachel had just been laid off, bills were piling up, and my IT job barely covered the essentials. I needed a better salary, and those interviews were our best shot.

But Catherine made it impossible. Every time I had a virtual interview, she turned the house into chaos. The TV blasted, 70s music blared, she shouted on the phone like she was at a concert. I asked her kindly to keep it down—just thirty minutes of quiet. She smiled and promised, but the next time she was banging pots, slamming cupboards, and making sure the noise carried straight into my study. Rachel tried to brush it off as coincidence, but by the third time, I knew she was doing it on purpose.

One day, before a big interview, I begged her for quiet. She scoffed. “If you’re good enough, no distraction will ruin your chances. And if it does, maybe that company doesn’t want you anyway.” Then, in the middle of my test, she pounded on the door screaming for me to open a jar of pickles. I failed. Again.

After five ruined interviews, I snapped. Catherine smirked and said, “Maybe you’re just not cut out for it.” That was it. I stopped asking for silence. Instead, I made her understand in her own language—through her precious TV. I signed her up for every streaming and premium package I could find—Netflix, Hulu, Spotify, HBO, even Bollywood Gold Pack—straight onto her credit card.

The next morning, she switched on the TV, smiled, then checked her phone. A $200 bill. Her shouting filled the house. I didn’t flinch. “Since you’ve made it clear you don’t want me working, I can’t pay for entertainment anymore. But you seem to enjoy it, so think of it as your contribution.”

We finally had it out. She accused me of blaming her for my failures. I told her the truth: she’d deliberately sabotaged me, ignored every request, and disrespected the home we shared. Rachel, usually quiet during these fights, simply told her, “Mom, maybe don’t make his life harder if you don’t want surprises.” Catherine left the house within the week.

The silence that followed was like fresh air. Two weeks later, I landed a new IT job—better pay, no noise, no sabotage. And the lesson was clear: you can ask nicely a hundred times, but sometimes silence only comes when the bill arrives.

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