She Retired In Puebla, Then Her Children Treated Her Like Free Labor-xurixuri

Doña Teresa Álvarez had spent more than 30 years wearing the same Correos de México uniform through heat, rain, holiday lines, and the quiet exhaustion of widowhood.

By the time she retired at 66, her hands had memorized envelopes, stamps, money orders, and the weight of other people’s urgent messages. She had delivered letters in storms and stood behind counters until her feet swelled.

She had also raised 2 children alone after losing her husband. Alejandro and Mariana were not easy children, but Teresa had made them lunches, washed their uniforms, paid school fees, and protected them from knowing how frightened she was.

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When the union gave her a golden plaque on her last day, it felt smaller than what she had survived. Still, she carried it home carefully, wrapped in cellophane, beside a cheap bouquet that smelled sour by evening.

She had imagined retirement as a door. Behind it were late mornings, café de olla in the patio, bugambilias along the wall, and maybe a trip to Oaxaca or Mazatlán with her sister Lupita.

But that same afternoon, before Teresa had even taken off her Correos de México uniform, Alejandro arrived with Santiago and Emiliano. They carried backpacks, lunchboxes, and a bag of clothes.

“Mamá, it’ll only be a few hours,” he said. “You have time now.”

He did not wait for a proper answer. He kissed the boys on the forehead, stepped backward through the door, and left while speaking into his phone.

One hour later, Mariana came with Valeria asleep in her arms. She looked tired, but not the kind of tired Teresa knew. Hers was the tiredness of someone inconvenienced, not someone carrying a household on her spine.

“Mami, I’m dead,” Mariana said. “I need to go to the gym and then I have dinner with some friends. You understand, right?”

Teresa did understand. That had always been the problem. She understood hunger before her children named it, sadness before they cried, and laziness before they dressed it up as emergency.

That evening, she made quesadillas, warmed milk, wiped noses, and picked toys from under furniture. Her knees burned, but the children laughed, and she told herself love was supposed to stretch.

For a while, she believed it would be temporary. Grandmothers helped. Families adjusted. Children needed care, and she had always been the one who knew how to make room.

Then Monday became Tuesday. Tuesday became the rest of the week. Alejandro began arriving at 7:00 with the boys still blinking sleep from their eyes.

“Watch them for me, má,” he would say. “I have a meeting today.”

Mariana came with Valeria in the afternoons and a list of instructions. No sugar. No cartoons. No certain soap. No dirty dress, because it was designer.

Teresa followed the rules as best she could. She washed little hands, peeled fruit, tied shoes, and learned which cartoon songs made Valeria clap. She bought diapers, milk, notebooks, crayons, and medicine.

Nobody asked what anything cost. Nobody asked whether her pension covered all that extra food. Nobody asked why she sometimes pressed one hand to the kitchen counter before standing.

Instead, they began speaking as if her life had ended the moment her paid work did. Retirement, to them, was not freedom. It was availability.

One afternoon, while Teresa washed a glass with chocolate dried at the bottom, she heard Alejandro laughing on the patio.

“My mom doesn’t work anymore,” he said into the phone. “She has all the time in the world.”

The faucet hissed over her hands. The sponge went cold. That sentence entered her like a splinter and stayed there.

All the time in the world.

It ignored her aching back. It ignored the nights she sat awake rubbing ointment into her legs. It ignored the strange pressure in her chest that had finally made her schedule a cardiologist appointment.

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