Querido Hijo Estas Despedido ~repack~ -
He mailed it the next day. And for the first time in years, his mother’s reply was not a phone call, but a postcard. On the front: a beach. On the back: “Deal. Now stop writing letters and go change your oil.” End of write-up.
Starting today, you are fired from being my central occupation. I am retiring from motherhood as a full-time job. I will be a consultant: available for emergencies, holidays, and the occasional jar of your grandmother’s pickled onions. But I will no longer lose sleep because you sent a vague ‘I’m fine’ text. I will no longer rearrange my calendar around your visits. I will no longer feel guilty for having fun while you work late.
I am firing you.
Mamá (formerly ‘Mom, Inc.’)” Mateo read the letter three times. Then he laughed—a wet, startled sound. Then he cried, because he realized he had been treating his mother like a safety net, not a person. He picked up the phone, not to call, but to book her a flight to that seaside village. He wrote on the back of her letter: “Counter-offer: I quit being your worry. You quit being my martyr. Deal?”
I love you. But your shift is over.
No more.
You are an adult. You have a career, a girlfriend who rolls her eyes when I call too often, and a life that runs just fine without my daily prayers for your socks to match. And yet, I have been acting as your general manager—worried about your cholesterol, your heating bill, the fact that you haven’t changed your car’s oil in fourteen months. querido hijo estas despedido
Querido hijo, estás despedido.