Derek spent weeks in his shed building a “surprise” for our 10th anniversary. On the day, he unveiled a bizarre press: two plywood slabs clamped by long metal rods with my gift locked inside. He quipped I’d have to “work for a change,” then left—on our anniversary. I spent hours unscrewing nuts until one wouldn’t budge, furious and exhausted.
Hunting tools in his shed, I found a velvet box with a gold heart locket engraved “To M — Love always, D,” plus receipts for fancy gifts and dinners I’d never seen. Convinced he was cheating, I grabbed an angle grinder, cut through the rods, and freed the wrapped “gift”—a framed honeymoon photo with a note, “Still my girl.” I broke down, then decided he’d feel what I felt.
When Derek returned, I confronted him about “M.” He swore it stood for “Mom” and showed the locket’s photo—his mother, young—plus two hard-won tickets to the theater I’d been begging to see. He admitted the contraption was a dumb distraction while he queued for the real surprise; the receipts were for his mom’s upcoming birthday.
I told him the stunt made me feel unappreciated—that I already “work” nonstop. He apologized, promised never again, and we agreed tickets don’t fix everything—but honesty and thoughtfulness might. No cheating, just cluelessness; I kept the tickets—and my boundaries.