After my eight-year-old daughter’s birthday, my mother-in-law gathered up all the presents and said she would take them to her other granddaughter

My daughter had just celebrated her eighth birthday. The house was filled with laughter, balloons, and the smell of cake. We had invited family and friends; the children were running around, the adults were chatting, and I was simply happy — everything had gone perfectly.

When the guests left, my husband walked the last ones out, and only my daughter, my mother-in-law, and I stayed in the room.
My little girl was happily going through her presents — a doll, a stuffed bunny, a drawing set. Her eyes sparkled with joy.

Suddenly, my mother-in-law came closer, took the doll from my daughter’s hands, and calmly placed it into a clear plastic bag. Then she added a few more gifts.

— Grandma, why are you taking my presents? — my daughter asked, her voice trembling. — It’s my birthday today!
— It’s fine, mommy and daddy will buy you more, — she said dismissively. — My other granddaughter doesn’t have anything like this.

That “other granddaughter” was her older daughter’s child, who lived in another city. And to be honest, they lacked nothing — they had expensive toys, beautiful clothes, even a brand-new tablet.

— You have no right to take my child’s presents, — I said quietly but firmly. — If you want to make your other granddaughter happy, buy her something yourself.

My mother-in-law turned around and, without saying a word, slapped me across the face.
A sharp, cold slap that hung in the air like an icy drop.

I didn’t cry. I straightened up, looked her in the eyes, and said:
— That’s enough.

I walked over, took the bag of gifts, and handed it back to my daughter.

— These are yours, sweetheart. No one has the right to touch them.

Then I calmly closed the door and called my husband:
— Come home. Now.

When he came in and saw us — our daughter crying and me with a red cheek — no words were needed.

My mother-in-law tried to justify herself: “I only wanted what’s best,” but he interrupted sharply:
— What’s best is not dividing children into ‘mine’ and ‘the others’.

Since that day, she has never come to our home uninvited again.
And my daughter still keeps that doll — as a reminder of the day her mother truly protected her for the first time.

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