
While on maternity leave, I juggle diapers, dishes, and exhaustion — only for my husband, Trey, to scoff at the mess and call me lazy for buying a robot vacuum. He thinks I do nothing all day. He has no idea what I have in store for him.
The baby monitor crackles to life at 3:28 a.m., a sound that has become more reliable than any alarm clock I’ve ever owned.

A baby monitor on a nightstand | Source: DALL-E
Darkness still clings to the edges of the room, but my world has long since stopped operating on normal schedules.
Averaging more than four hours of sleep at a time is a distant memory, a luxury I can barely recall.
I lift Sean from his crib, his tiny fingers already reaching for me with an urgency that both breaks and fills my heart. His soft whimpers quickly escalate into full-blown hunger cries.

A crying baby | Source: Pexels
The nursing chair has become my command center, my battlefield, my moment of both connection and exhaustion.
Before Sean, I was a marketing executive who could juggle client presentations, strategic planning, and home management with surgical precision.
Now, my world has shrunk to this house, this routine of diapers, feedings, and an ongoing war to maintain myself and my home. The contrast is jarring.

A woman sitting in a chair holding a baby | Source: Midjourney
These days, I measure success by how long the baby naps and whether I remember to eat lunch.
Trey, my husband, doesn’t understand. How could he? He leaves every morning, dressed in crisp shirts that haven’t been stretched or stained, hair perfectly styled, briefcase in hand.
He enters a world of adult conversations, of problems that can be solved with a meeting, a spreadsheet, or a strategic email.

A tired woman | Source: Midjourney
By the time Trey gets home, the house looks like a disaster that would make Marie Kondo shiver.
Dishes tower in the sink, and laundry spills onto the floor. The crumbs and spills I haven’t wiped up on the kitchen counter form a map of some unknown land. The dust bunnies in the living room are on the verge of forming their own civilization.
The chaos is breathtaking — and completely avoidable, if only a certain someone else ever lifted a finger.

Dirty dishes in a kitchen sink | Source: Pexels
Trey’s reaction is predictable.
“Wow,” he says, dropping his briefcase with a heavy sigh. “It looks like a tornado hit.”
The words slice through me.
I’m folding tiny onesies and booties that seem to multiply faster than rabbits, my back aching, and my hair (which hasn’t seen a proper brush in days) tucked behind my ears.

Folded baby clothes | Source: Pexels
“I’ve been a bit busy,” I say, holding back tears.
I may be done with baby hormones, but I never fully realized why sleep deprivation is considered torture until Sean came along.
I foolishly ignored the advice to nap when the baby naps for the first month after Sean was born, so I could keep up with the mess. Because if I didn’t do it, who would?

A woman glancing over her shoulder | Source: Midjourney
So instead of resting, I scrubbed poop stains out of changing mats, folded onesies, wiped down counters, and tried to keep some sense of order.
And now? My body feels like it’s running on fumes, my eyelids burn, and some days, I swear I can hear smells.
Trey kicks off his shoes, changes his clothes, and flops onto the couch, transforming effortlessly from a professional to a man claiming his kingdom.

A man relaxing on a sofa | Source: Midjourney
“You could help, you know,” I say. “Maybe tackle the dishes, do a load of laundry…”
Trey looks at me like I’m mad.
“Why? You don’t work like I do. What else do you do all day besides housework? Don’t ask me for help — I’M tired.”

A man staring at someone | Source: Midjourney
“Trey, I’m caring for our son, and it’s very demanding. Even work wasn’t this stressful.”
He pulls a face like I just told him the sky is green. “Caring for our son, who basically just eats and sleeps, is stressful?”
“It’s not that simple. Sometimes I have to walk laps around the house just to get him to stop crying—”
“Right, but you’re still home,” he says, frowning.

A frowning man | Source: Midjourney
“You could throw in a load of laundry while you’re at it,” he adds.
My stomach clenches. “I do laundry, Trey. But then Sean wakes up and needs me, or he spits up on me, or I realize I haven’t eaten, and suddenly, it’s 3 p.m. and I haven’t even sat down—”
“Okay, but if you planned your time better…” He trailed off, nodding at the dishes in the sink. “You could clean up as you go instead of letting everything pile up.”

An earnest man | Source: Midjourney
My grip tightens around the onesie in my hand. He still doesn’t get it. He doesn’t even want to get it.
“You should be grateful, you know. You’re practically on vacation. I wish I could just hang out at home in my pajamas all day,” he mutters, scrolling through his phone.
Something inside me begins to boil. Not a sudden eruption, but a slow, steady heat that’s been building for months.

A woman staring at someone | Source: Midjourney
Before Sean, our division of labor was manageable. Not equal, but workable. Trey would occasionally do a load of laundry, cook when he felt like it, and handle the dishes sometimes.
I managed most of the housework, but it still felt collaborative. Now, I’m invisible. A ghost in my own home, existing solely to serve.
When my parents give me birthday money, I make a strategic decision.

A thoughtful woman | Source: Midjourney
I bought a robot vacuum. I was so relieved to have something to help me, even if all it did was prevent me from drowning in crushed Cheerios and pet hair, that I cried when I opened it. I even considered naming it.
Trey’s reaction was explosive.
“A robot vacuum? Really?” he snaps. His face contorts with a mixture of disbelief and anger. “That’s so lazy, and wasteful. We’re supposed to be saving for vacation with my family, not buying toys for moms who don’t want to clean.”

A woman staring in shock | Source: Midjourney
I feel like I’ve been slapped. Don’t want to clean? I’m drowning in cleaning. Cleaning and motherhood are my entire existence.
I stare at him as he rants on about the vacuum, and how foolish I was to buy something like that with a no-returns policy.
But I don’t argue or defend myself, because why bother? He’s already proven he won’t listen.

A woman with emotive eyes | Source: Midjourney
I don’t even feel the urge to cry. Instead, I smile.
Something inside me cracks at that moment. Exhaustion has worn me down to my last nub of sanity, and I decide then that my husband needs to learn a lesson.
The next morning, Trey’s phone vanishes.
When he asks about it, I offer sweet, calculated innocence.

A woman in a home nursery | Source: Midjourney
“People used to send letters,” I say. “Let’s stop being wasteful with all these electronics.”
Three days of mounting frustration follow. He searches everywhere, becoming increasingly agitated.
By the end of day three, he’s snapping at shadows, muttering about responsibility and communication.
Just as he adjusts to a phoneless life, his car keys disappear.

Car keys on a table | Source: Pexels
He has work. Panic sets in, so he borrows my phone and orders an Uber. I cancel it.
“People used to walk five miles to work,” I remind him, my voice dripping with the same condescension he’s used on me for months. “You should embrace a simpler lifestyle.”
“But I’m going to be late—!” he stammers. “This isn’t funny!”
“Don’t be so lazy, Trey,” I echo, throwing his own words back at him like weapons.

A woman looking calmly at someone | Source: Midjourney
He storms out, fuming, and walks the mile and a half to his office.
I can’t help but feel a small, vindictive satisfaction, but I’m far from done. He thinks I do nothing all day? Fine. Let him see what it looks like when I really do nothing all day.
From that day, all I did was take care of Sean. By the end of the week, the house is a war zone of domestic chaos.

A huge pile of laundry | Source: Pexels
“Babe… what happened to the laundry? I have no clean shirts, and why is the fridge empty?” he asks, eyes wide with disbelief.
I look up from feeding Sean, serene and unbothered. “Oh, it’s because I’m just so lazy and don’t want to clean, do nothing all day, can’t plan my time… did I miss anything?”
He’s smart enough not to answer.

A man staring at someone from a hallway | Source: Midjourney
The next day, Trey comes home with wilted gas station roses, looking like someone who has been through battle, which, in a way, he has.
“You were right,” he mutters. “I’m sorry. I didn’t realize how hard you’ve been working.”
“No, you really don’t.” I hand him a detailed two-page schedule documenting everything I do in a single day. From 5:00 a.m. baby feeds to potential midnight wake-ups, every minute is accounted for.

A woman holding a paper page | Source: Midjourney
He reads in silence, his face a canvas of growing understanding and horror.
“I’m exhausted just reading this,” he whispers.
“Welcome to my life,” I respond.
Luckily, things are starting to improve after that, but we soon realize understanding isn’t enough.

An emotional man in a doorway | Source: Midjourney
We start therapy, and Trey begins to truly participate, learning what it means to be an equal partner.
And the robot vacuum? It stays. A small, mechanical trophy of my silent rebellion.
Motherhood isn’t a vacation. It’s a full-time job with overtime, no sick days, and the most demanding boss imaginable: a tiny human who depends on you for absolutely everything.
Can You Solve This Tricky Viral Math Problem
We all love a good brain teaser, especially when it involves math—whether we admit it or not. A tricky math problem recently went viral, leaving the internet divided and proving once again that even simple-looking equations can be deceptive.
My Math Struggles & A Challenge
Here’s a quick personal anecdote: I recently started preparing for the GRE and realized that I hadn’t taken a formal math class in nearly nine years. Confidence? Gone. My quantitative reasoning skills? Rusty at best. So, I decided to brush up by taking online high school math courses, starting from the absolute basics.
When I came across this viral math puzzle that was stumping the internet, I thought, “This is my moment! Let’s see if I still have my 9th-grade math chops!” Spoiler: I did not.

The Viral Math Puzzle Taking the Internet by Storm
The problem originally surfaced in Japan, where researchers found that only 60% of people in their 20s managed to solve it correctly. It quickly spread online, turning into yet another viral challenge because, apparently, we love testing our brains with tricky equations (or we just enjoy arguing over the answers).
At first glance, the problem looks simple. But the devil is in the details. My gut told me there was some sort of trick involved—it seemed too easy. However, instead of embarrassing myself by attempting it publicly, I turned to the internet for guidance. If there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that someone, somewhere, has already tackled your problem and made an instructional video about it. So, I spent my morning watching people do math on YouTube. Exciting stuff.
The Math Problem:
6 ÷ 2(1 + 2) = ?
Go ahead, solve it. I’ll wait.
Video : Viral problem from Japan
Common Wrong Answers
If you got 1 or 9, you’re not alone. Many people arrived at these answers because of a little acronym called PEMDAS (Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition, Subtraction).
You may remember PEMDAS from school—or perhaps the mnemonic “Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally.” The rule dictates that you must solve problems in this specific order:
- Parentheses
- Exponents
- Multiplication & Division (from left to right)
- Addition & Subtraction (from left to right)
So, following PEMDAS, some people calculated it as:
- Solve inside the parentheses: (1 + 2) = 3
- Rewrite the problem: 6 ÷ 2(3)
- Some then treated 2(3) as a single term and multiplied first: 6 ÷ 6 = 1
However, others applied division before multiplication:
- 6 ÷ 2 = 3
- Then, 3 × 3 = 9
Both groups were confident in their logic, but only one approach was correct.
The Correct Answer
The correct answer is 9. Here’s why:
Step 1: Solve the Parentheses First
(1 + 2) = 3
Now the equation is rewritten as:
6 ÷ 2(3)
Step 2: Follow the Order of Operations
According to PEMDAS, division and multiplication are performed from left to right (since they share the same level of priority in the hierarchy).
- 6 ÷ 2 = 3
- 3 × 3 = 9
Wait… Isn’t the Answer 1?
Some people argue that implicit multiplication (like 2(3)) takes precedence over division. However, modern mathematical notation treats multiplication and division equally. Since they appear side by side in the equation, we solve left to right.
If the equation had been written as:
6 ÷ (2 × 3)
Then, you would multiply first and get:
6 ÷ 6 = 1
But because the given equation lacks parentheses around 2(3), the correct answer remains 9.
Why People Get It Wrong
The confusion stems from different ways of interpreting notation and how we were taught order of operations. In some older textbooks, implicit multiplication (like 2(3)) was given higher priority than division, leading to the alternative answer of 1. However, under modern mathematical conventions, division and multiplication hold equal weight and should be solved left to right.
Video : 13 Riddles That Are Trickier Than They Seem
Math Rules Are Not Always Universal
Believe it or not, different countries and academic institutions teach math slightly differently. Some older math textbooks might suggest treating multiplication next to parentheses as having higher priority, while others follow the standard left-to-right rule. This is why debates like this never really die down—people were simply taught different methods!
How to Avoid Future Math Confusion
- Always follow the standard order of operations – PEMDAS (or BODMAS, if you learned it that way).
- If in doubt, add brackets – Parentheses make everything clearer and help prevent confusion.
- Be consistent – If you’re solving problems with others, use the same approach so that everyone gets the same answer.
- Check multiple sources – Sometimes, even textbooks disagree. Looking at different explanations can help clarify tricky concepts.
Final Thoughts
This viral math problem is a perfect example of how simple-looking equations can spark endless debate. The way you approach it depends on how you learned math, but if you apply PEMDAS correctly, the answer is 9—at least according to current conventions.
So, did you get it right, or are you questioning everything you thought you knew about math? Either way, at least we can all agree that math is a lot trickier than it looks!
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