When Candace offered to host my kids for a week of summer fun at her mansion, I was genuinely touched.
With a six-bedroom house on ten acres, a pool, a trampoline, a PlayStation, and her 12-year-old daughter Mikayla for company, it sounded like absolute paradise. I even sent each of my kids—my daughter, 10, and my son, 8—with $150 so they wouldn’t feel shy asking for snacks or souvenirs. And just to be fair, I gave Mikayla the same.
For three days, I heard almost nothing. Candace told me they were having a blast—pool days, candy, cartoons, “a full-on kid paradise.” But on day four, I received a text from my daughter that made my blood run cold:
“MOM. COME SAVE US.”
I didn’t wait. I drove over immediately, heart racing—and what I found shocked me.
My son was scrubbing grime off pool tiles. My daughter was dragging overflowing trash bags to the curb while Mikayla lounged nearby sipping juice.
On a clipboard by the patio, I saw a schedule of “chores” required for pool access or screen time: scrubbing bathrooms, folding laundry, preparing snacks, and serving lemonade to Mikayla’s guests.
This wasn’t a sleepover. It was unpaid child labor. And my kids weren’t helping willingly—they were told they’d be locked in the garage overnight if they refused.
I demanded their phones back, packed them into the car, and left without another word.
The next morning, I sent Candace an invoice for $600—$10/hour per child, generously capped—with a short note: “Happy to send photos to your book club for context.”
She paid within the hour.
I used the money to take my kids to an amusement park for two full days of fun—roller coasters, ice cream, arcade games. No chores. Just joy.
Candace tried to call and apologize. I didn’t answer.
She may have seen it as a “life lesson,” but it turned into a rude awakening—for her.
As for my kids? They walked away knowing something far more powerful:
Their time and effort matter.
Their boundaries deserve respect.
And their mom will always show up—and never let anyone exploit them without a fight.