My name is Dominique. And I need you to understand something right up front. I did not lose this war.
I just had to let them think I did long enough to make sure the victory was permanent.
Let me take you back. I met Derek at a mutual friend’s cookout on a hot August Sunday.
He was charming in that quiet, deliberate way. The kind of man who listened when you talked, remembered details, made you feel like the only person in a loud room.
I fell in love with the man. What I did not see coming was the woman attached to him like a second shadow.
His mother’s name was Gloria. Gloria was 61 years old, sharp-tongued, wide-shouldered, with a church smile that never reached her eyes.
She wore her graying hair in a severe bun and carried herself like someone who had appointed themselves judge over everything within a 10-mile radius.
The first time I met her, she looked me up and down the way a woman does when she’s already decided and just needs confirmation.
Then she smiled at Derek and said, “She seems nice enough.” Not to me. About me.
Standing right there. I should have read that moment like the warning it was. But I was 28.
I was in love. And I told myself that difficult mothers-in-law were a universal experience.
Women navigated them all the time. I was strong. I was educated. I had my own career, my own savings, my own sense of self that no woman’s disapproval could dismantle.
What I underestimated was the level of access Derek gave her to our life. She had a key to our apartment before we were even engaged.
She called him every single morning, 7:15, like clockwork. She commented on my cooking at family dinners, rearranged my kitchen when I wasn’t home, and once told Derek, loud enough for me to hear from the next room, that I didn’t know how to love a man properly.
I stood in that hallway with a dish towel in my hand and made myself breathe.
I was already thinking, already planning, already understanding that with women like Gloria, the only move that matters is the last one.
Derek and I got married in our third year together. It was a beautiful wedding.
I made sure of it because I did most of the planning myself. Gloria tried to take over the florals, the seating chart, and the menu.
I let her think she had input on two of the three and quietly handled all of it myself.
That was the first time I understood my own strategy. Let her feel powerful in the small rooms while I locked the doors of the important ones.
But marriage changed things. Derek, outside of his mother’s presence, was a good man, attentive, funny.
He cooked on Sundays and always noticed when I was overwhelmed before I said a word.
But inside her orbit, and Gloria’s orbit was large, he shrank. He became someone who nodded, who deferred, who looked at his shoes when he should have looked at his wife.
“She doesn’t mean anything by it,” he told me once after Gloria had spent an entire Thanksgiving redirecting every conversation back to herself and made a comment about my childbearing hips at the dinner table.