My mom always believed cooking was “girl stuff” and made no secret of her disapproval when my 12-year-old son Cody found his passion in baking. I hoped she’d eventually accept it. I never imagined she’d go so far as to destroy it.
I’m Jacob, a 40-year-old widowed father of two—Cody and his younger sister, Casey.
A few days before Cody’s 13th birthday, I came home to the sweet smell of cookies. He was beaming, excited to show me a new recipe. It reminded me so much of his late mother, Susan, who always said baking was another way to show love.
But the moment was ruined when my mother, Elizabeth, sneered, “What kind of boy spends all his time in the kitchen like some little housewife?”
I tried to defend Cody, but her words visibly crushed him. She didn’t let up, calling baking “girl stuff” and saying I was raising him to be soft.
The next day, while I was at work, she crossed a line I couldn’t ignore. When Cody got home, he found all his baking tools—everything he’d bought over two years with birthday money and allowance—gone. My mom had thrown them away, claiming boys shouldn’t bake.
When I confronted her, she showed no remorse. “He needs to learn to be a man,” she said.
That was it. I told her to leave. I wasn’t going to let anyone, not even my mother, make my child feel ashamed of who he is.
She argued. My stepfather called, furious. But I stood firm. I wasn’t being dramatic—I was being a father.
The next day, I took Cody and Casey shopping to replace everything. Watching him light up again as he picked out new tools was all the confirmation I needed—I’d made the right choice.
That night, Cody thanked me. And when Casey asked if Grandma would ever come back, I told her: “Only if she learns to love you both exactly as you are.”