
I Lied to My Wife About Our Baby, and Her Reaction When She Found Out Was More than I Could Handle – Story of the Day
The morning my wife went back to work, my mother accused us of "breaking the family." I thought I could prove her wrong, but when our baby hit his first milestone, I made a choice that spiraled into the biggest lie of our marriage.
It was Jennifer's first day back at work, but the kitchen felt like a courtroom. My mom leaned against the counter, watching my wife with the kind of look that could strip paint off a wall.
"You're making a huge mistake. The baby needs his mother," Mom said, wiping down an already-clean counter for the third time that morning.
Jennifer met her stare. She didn't blink or flinch. "I'm not abandoning him. I'm going back to my career. There's a difference."
I stepped in then, baby Wyatt propped on my hip like a tiny referee.
"We've been over this, Mom. Jen's job pays more, and I've adjusted my hours to part-time remote. We're doing what works for our family."
Mom scoffed. "Funny, it looks like you're playing house and calling it progress."
She headed back to her coffee, and the clink of her spoon against the ceramic mug punctuated her sentence like a judge's gavel.
Case closed. Or so she thought.
Jennifer gripped her purse strap tighter. "You raised your son, Mary-Anne, now let us raise ours the way we choose."
I followed Jen to the door, and then something shifted.
Jennifer took Wyatt from my arms, and all that armor just dropped away. She pressed a long kiss to the top of his head, closed her eyes. One second. Two. Her breath caught.
"Promise me you'll send videos of everything?"
I nodded. "Everything."
She crossed the threshold, but then the vulnerability slipped out, quieter than a whisper.
"I'm going to miss so much, aren't I?"
I took her hand and squeezed it. "You're doing what's right. He's going to be proud of you one day."
The door shut behind her, but not before I caught her eyes flicking to Mom one last time.
***
A few weeks later, I was on the floor with Wyatt when it happened.
He flipped himself over like he'd been planning it for weeks. I laughed and cheered. This was big. Huge, actually!
Oh God, I needed to record this for Jen. I fumbled for my phone and caught the tail end on video in a blur of excitement.
You could barely tell what was happening in the video. I was too slow. I tried to get Wyatt to roll over again, but he wouldn't cooperate.
I stared at my phone, fingers hovering over the "share" option, and pictured Jennifer at her desk. I'd promised to take videos, but what good was this blur of movement? It was barely any better than some grainy YouTube footage of Chupacabra.
Reality hit like cold water.
I couldn't send her this… but maybe I could do something even better than catch Wyatt's milestones on video.
I spent the rest of the day trying to recreate Wyatt's first roll. That night, when Jennifer got home from work, I set him up in the living room for tummy time just like I had earlier.
I held up Wyatt's favorite toy. As Jennifer looked on, Wyatt rolled over and reached for it.
"Oh my God, was that his first time?" She gasped, hands flying to her face.
I looked her in the eye and lied.
She burst into tears, picked Wyatt up, and held him close. "Clever boy, Wyatt! Oh, you're growing so fast. I can't believe I was here to see that."
I hugged them both, trying to believe this was a harmless sort of deception.
From the armchair, Mom didn't even look up from her crocheting. "Isn't the timing just perfect? You're barely here, and yet Wyatt just happened to roll over now. It's almost like it was rehearsed."
I quickly changed the subject.
The lie became a habit, a secret routine in which I orchestrated Wyatt's milestones like I was directing a movie. On the day he started crawling, I lined the floor with Cheerios and belly-crawled beside Wyatt to coach him toward a memorable "first crawl" moment for Jen that evening.
"Is this what modern masculinity looks like?" Mom muttered. I looked up, and my stomach dropped when I saw she was recording us.
"Delete that!" I sprang to my feet and rushed toward her.
Mom shook her head. "I'm going to send this to Jennifer. She deserves to know the truth."
"No, she deserves to feel like she's here." I pressed my hands together. "Please, Mom. I'm doing this for her..."
Mom pursed her lips. She tapped on her phone and showed me that she'd deleted the video.
"If she's not satisfied with videos, then maybe she should be here in person instead of chasing her career."
"This is your last chance," Mom continued. "I'm not going to lie for you anymore."
I couldn't risk having Mom tell Jennifer what I'd been up to, so I promised myself that I wouldn't recreate any more of Wyatt's firsts for Jennifer.
But then he took his first steps while Jen was away on a business trip.
"One last time, please," I pleaded with Mom. "It's his first steps... it would mean so much to Jen to experience that moment."
"What a pity she wasn't here, looking after her baby, like a proper mother," Mom said. "She wouldn't need a husband who treats their child like a movie actor then."
She wouldn't listen to reason, so I just made sure she was out when I recreated Wyatt's first steps.
I had to do something to make him seem less confident, so I hid beanbags in his onesie to make him wobble.
Wyatt stumbled forward, arms out, and Jennifer squealed.
"He walked!"
"His first steps!" I cried out.
When Mom returned from the store, Jennifer excitedly showed her the video she'd taken of Wyatt walking.
Mom gave me a hard look before turning back to Jennifer. "Don't you find it strange that you're always here for these momentous occasions? It's not like you're home much..."
I quickly steered Jennifer back into the living room. The whole carefully constructed house of cards I'd been building threatened to collapse, but I was in too deep.
As Jennifer grabbed her bag one morning, I held Wyatt up and prompted him to say good-bye to her.
He lifted his hand and said, clear as a baby can, "Bye-bye."
"Did you hear that?" I gasped. "His first good-bye!"
Jennifer's face lit up. She took Wyatt and hugged him tight enough to make him squirm. I never would've imagined that would be the day everything blew up in my face.
***
That afternoon, Jennifer returned home early, still glowing, and gushed to Mom about Wyatt's first good-bye.
Mom listened, nodded, and casually pulled out her phone.
"Oh, I took a cute photo of Wyatt feeding the ducks at the park yesterday. Want to see?"
Jennifer leaned in. Her smile grew even wider as she looked at the photo.
"Oh, there's a video, too." She reached out and tapped at Mom's phone screen. The sound of Wyatt saying good-bye to the ducks the previous day (his real first good-bye) filled the room.
Time seemed to stand still as I watched Jennifer's smile fade, her brow knit with confusion, then the pained look in her eyes as realization dawned on her.
I began to stammer an explanation, words tripping over themselves, but Mom cut in.
"It's time to stop pretending. Jennifer, Luke has been staging most of Wyatt's milestones for you since the day he first rolled over."
Jennifer lowered the phone. Her eyes landed on me. She didn't say anything — she didn't need to. All the hurt and betrayal were clear in her gaze.
Then she turned and walked out of the room. I followed her, still trying to explain, but she locked herself in the bathroom.
Soft sobs echoed through the closed door, muffled but unmistakable. Each one felt like a knife.
I confronted Mom in the kitchen. "Why would you let her see that?"
She shrugged. "What was I supposed to do? Grab the phone from her hands? I told you to stop lying to her."
A chill ran down my spine. "Did you let her see that video on purpose?"
Mom arched her eyebrows. "Luke, I tell people things to their faces because that's honest. I don't know where you got this… flair for staging situations, but it wasn't from me."
She walked away then. I returned to the living room, placed Wyatt in his bouncer, and wondered if I'd broken something that couldn't be fixed.
Eventually, I heard Jennifer's footsteps on the floor. I braced myself for angry words, but she sat beside me on the couch and lowered her head to my shoulder.
"I thought I was doing the right thing," she whispered. "Going back to work, providing, but I've been so scared that Wyatt wouldn't know me. That I'd become the person who shows up for the highlight reel but misses the real moments."
I opened my mouth, but she continued.
"You tried to give me those moments… You knew how much I needed them."
She lifted her head, looked at me directly. Her eyes were red-rimmed but clear. "That was stupid. And sweet. And completely idiotic."
"I'm sorry," I said.
"I know." She took a breath. "But I need to stop trying to have it all perfectly. I need to accept that I'm going to miss things, and that's the choice I made." Her voice cracked. "Our choice." She reached for my hand. "No more fake firsts?"
"No more fake firsts," I promised.
"And no more guilt trips from your mother about me working?"
I glanced toward the kitchen, where Mom had made herself scarce. "I'll handle it."
Jennifer nodded. Then, after a pause, she added something that surprised me.
"She was right to tell me, you know. As much as I hate it, as much as it hurts. She was too blunt, as usual, but rather that than a family built on lies."
We sat there as the afternoon light shifted across the living room floor. Wyatt babbled happily in the background.
Share this story with your friends. It might inspire them and brighten their day.
If you enjoyed this story, read this one: I found the letter three days before Jamie's 18th birthday, hidden beneath his father's watch. It was from his birth mother — sealed, waiting 17 years to tell him something I never could. I had to decide: give him the truth that might destroy us, or let him believe a lie that kept us together. Read the full story here.
This story is a work of fiction inspired by real events. Names, characters, and details have been altered. Any resemblance is coincidental. The author and publisher disclaim accuracy, liability, and responsibility for interpretations or reliance. If you would like to share your story, please send it to info@amomama.com.