I was in my final year of nursing school, preparing for the most important exams of my life, when my mother-in-law Lydia decided to stay with us for three weeks. Instead of supporting me, she constantly demanded my time for family visits, shopping, and dinners. When I refused, she dismissed my studies as “hobbies” and insisted my real priority should be giving her son a family.
The tension boiled over the night before my biggest exam. I set my alarm for 6:30, but the next morning, I woke up to find it had been changed to 9:30. I missed the start of the exam, and Lydia sat smugly at the kitchen table, admitting she did it so I’d attend her birthday dinner. I was devastated, but thankfully, the university allowed me to take a makeup test.
I decided not to let her get away with it. The night before her flight home, I reset every clock in the house three hours ahead. At midnight, her alarm went off, and she rushed to the airport in a panic, only to discover she was four hours early. She blew up my phone with angry messages, but I finally replied, reminding her how she once “helped” me with my exam.
Since then, Lydia has been much more respectful. I passed my exams with top grades and started working at a children’s hospital. The experience taught me a powerful lesson: some people only understand consequences, not words. Karma doesn’t always come naturally—sometimes you just have to give it a little push.