Mommy & Daddyy

Mommy & Daddyy Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Mommy & Daddyy, Digital creator, 2563 Providence Lane, Irvine, CA.
(2)

Check The First Comment👇
05/31/2025

Check The First Comment👇

05/31/2025
My Ex-husband Got Our House, Car and All Our Money After Divorce – But I...===I stepped out of the lawyer's office with ...
05/31/2025

My Ex-husband Got Our House, Car and All Our Money After Divorce – But I...
===
I stepped out of the lawyer's office with a blank expression, my shoulders slumped, looking every bit the defeated ex-wife. The rain was coming down hard, and the gray sky matched my mood — or at least the mood I wanted people to think I was in.
Inside, I was buzzing. My hands clenched the cold steel of the door handle as I headed toward the elevator. No one was around. Good.
The elevator door closed behind me with a soft ding, and as soon as I was alone, I let out a little giggle. It wasn't something I planned; it bubbled up from deep inside like champagne finally uncorked.
The more I thought about what I'd just done the more it built up until I was cackling in the elevator like a lunatic.
If anyone saw me right then, they'd think I had finally snapped, gone over the edge from all the stress, but oh no, this was just the beginning. Everything was falling perfectly into place.
The house, the car, the savings — Mike could have them all. It was exactly what I wanted. He thought he'd won, and that was the best part. He didn't have a clue what was coming.
The elevator stopped with a jolt, and I pulled myself together. I glanced at my reflection in the elevator's mirrored wall: messy hair, tired eyes, and a faint smile still lingering on my lips. I didn't even care. This was going to be fun.
A few weeks earlier...
Mike and I hadn't been happy for years, but it wasn't just the regular kind of falling out of love. Mike was obsessed with his image. He was all about the flashy cars, having the biggest house on the block, and wearing only designer clothes.
All of it was a performance, and I had played my part for too long. The cracks had started to show, and when the arguments became more frequent, I knew it wasn't long before the inevitable happened.
The thing is, I wasn't scared of the divorce. I knew Mike, and I knew exactly how this would play out.
He didn't care about saving the marriage. No, what he wanted was to win — win the house, win the money, win the divorce.
All I wanted was to be free of this pretentious lifestyle. But that didn't mean I was going to let him screw me over, either. So, I'd let Mike have what he wanted, but with a catch as sharp as a fishhook...
(continue reading in the 1st comment

When Dad's lawyer called about the will reading, I'd been elbow-deep in moving boxes, sorting through decades of memorie...
05/31/2025

When Dad's lawyer called about the will reading, I'd been elbow-deep in moving boxes, sorting through decades of memories. I couldn't face the lawyer's office, so I called my son, Matt, and asked him to attend instead.
"Sure, Mom," he replied. "Are you sure you don't need help to sort through Grandad's things?"
"Thanks, but I'm managing," I replied. "I'm going to fetch his belongings from the nursing home later today. Why don't you come by this afternoon and let me know if there's anything special you want to remember him by, okay?"
I was so certain the will reading would be a clear-cut affair without surprises. How wrong I was.
The nursing home smelled of antiseptic and faintly of wilted flowers, a combination that made my throat tighten. I took a steadying breath as a young nurse handed me Dad's belongings, neatly packed in a plain, worn cardboard box.
"Here you are, Ma'am," the nurse said, her voice gentle but distant as if she'd done this a hundred times.
I nodded, murmuring a quiet thank you as I lifted the box.
It wasn't heavy, but the weight seemed to press down on me all the same. Inside were the simple things: his favorite worn sweater, a small Bible with its cover frayed from years of use, and several mystery novels with dog-eared pages.
I brushed my fingers over the sweater, catching a faint scent of his cologne, familiar and fleeting.
The finality hit me when I turned to leave.
Dad was truly gone. I tightened my grip on the box as if holding onto it could somehow keep him with me. When I reached my car, silent tears were slipping down my cheeks.
I sat in the car and cried until my tears ran out. My phone beeped and rang several times, but it was just Matt. He was probably worried about me, but some grief you have to wade through alone.
The last thing I expected to find when I arrived home was my whole life strewn across the front lawn like some kind of unholy estate sale.
The wind picked up, scattering the memories I'd so carefully packed into boxes and hauled down from the attic.
Mom's old recipes, her china, the worn plaid quilt Dad used to nap under, and all his books — it all lay out in the open, unprotected, as if they meant nothing. I stumbled out of my car, heart pounding.
"What in God's name
" I muttered, my voice swallowed by the wind.
"Oh, good. You're finally back. I was getting tired of waiting."
There, perched on my patio furniture with her designer sunglasses and her too-bright lipstick, was Jessica. My daughter-in-law didn't even glance up from her phone. She took a leisurely sip from her coffee, and her lips curved in a barely restrained smirk.
"Jessica
 What is all this?" My eyes swept over the chaos, disbelief clamping down on my chest. "What are you doing?"
She glanced up, lowering her sunglasses just enough for me to see the disdain in her eyes. She waved a manicured hand dismissively.
"I'm doing what's necessary. This is my home now, after all."
A cold knot twisted in my stomach. "Your home? What are you talking about?"
"Looks like you should've attended the will reading." Jessica held up a crisp piece of paper, and there was my father's signature, clear as day, at the bottom. "Guess your dad knew who deserved it most, huh?"
I swayed, gripping the car door for support. "That's impossible. Dad would never—"
"Oh, but he did." She smirked, casually inspecting her perfect manicure.
"Signed, sealed, delivered. The house is mine now." She leaned in close, her perfume, a cloying, artificial scent, invading my space. "I think it's time you moved on, Hattie."
A truck rumbled into the driveway, and my son, Matt, climbed out, his face twisting as he took in the scene. His boots crunched over the gravel as he approached, confusion deepening the crease between his brows.
"What the heck, Jess? First you run out of the lawyer's office, and now you send me this weird text? What's going on?" he asked, glancing from me to Jessica, his jaw tight.
She stretched, standing at last, looking smug and at ease in her towering heels. It made my skin crawl. "Like I said, I'm making some necessary changes, honey. And actually, there's more you should know."
Matt's expression hardened with a flash of something I hadn't seen before. "More than you throwing my mother's belongings all over the yard?"
"Much more!" Jessica's laugh was harsh. "I want... (continue reading in the 1st comment)

My Neighbor Started a Barbecue Every Time I Hung Laundry Outside—So I Taught Her an Unforgettable Lesson!===Some people ...
05/31/2025

My Neighbor Started a Barbecue Every Time I Hung Laundry Outside—So I Taught Her an Unforgettable Lesson!
===
Some people mark the seasons by holidays or weather. I mark mine by which sheets are on the line: flannel in winter, cotton in summer, and those lavender-scented ones my late husband Tom used to love in spring. After 35 years in the same modest two-bedroom house on Pine Street, certain rituals become your anchors, especially when life has stripped so many others away.
I was pinning up the last of my white sheets one Tuesday morning when I heard the telltale scrape of metal across concrete next door.
"Not again," I muttered, clothes pins still clenched between my lips.
That's when I saw her: Melissa, my neighbor of exactly six months. She was dragging her massive stainless steel barbecue grill to the fence line. Our eyes met briefly before she looked away, a smile playing at the corners of her mouth.
"Morning, Diane!" she called out with artificial sweetness. "Beautiful day for a cookout, isn't it?"
I removed the pins from my mouth. "At ten in the morning on a Tuesday?"
She shrugged, her blonde highlights catching the sun. "I'm meal prepping. You know how it is... busy, busy!"
I had to rewash an entire load that came out reeking of burnt bacon and lighter fluid after one of Melissa's smoky meal prep sessions.
When she pulled the same stunt that Friday while I was hanging clothes on the line, I'd had enough and stormed across the lawn.
"Melissa, are you grilling bacon and lighting God knows what every time I do laundry? My whole house smells like a diner married a bonfire."
She gave me that fake, sugary smile and chirped, "I'm just enjoying my yard. Isn't that what neighbors are supposed to do?"
Within minutes, thick plumes of smoke drifted directly onto my pristine sheets, the acrid smell of burnt bacon and steak mingling with the scent of my lavender detergent.
This wasn't cooking. This was warfare.
"Everything okay, hon?" Eleanor, my elderly neighbor from across the street, called from her garden.
I forced a smile. "Just peachy. Nothing says 'welcome to the neighborhood' quite like smoke-infused laundry."
Eleanor set down her trowel and walked over. "That's the third time this week she's fired up that thing the minute your laundry goes out."
"Fourth," I corrected. "You missed Monday's impromptu hot dog extravaganza."
"Have you tried talking to her?"
I nodded, watching as my sheets began to take on a grayish tinge. "Twice. She just smiles and says she's 'enjoying her property rights.'"
Eleanor's eyes narrowed. "Well, Tom wouldn't have stood for this nonsense."
The mention of my husband's name still created that momentary hitch in my chest, even eight years later. "No, he wouldn't have. But Tom also believed in picking your battles."
"And is this one worth picking?"
I watched as Melissa flipped a hamburger patty, the grill large enough to cook for 20 people. "I'm starting to think it might be."
I took down my now smoke-infused sheets, holding back tears of frustration. These were the last set Tom and I had bought together before his diagnosis. Now they reeked of cheap charcoal and pettiness.
"This isn't over," I whispered to myself as I trudged back inside with my ruined laundry. "Not by a long shot."
"Mom, maybe it's time to just get a dryer," my daughter Sarah suggested. "They're more efficient now, and—"
"I have a perfectly good clothesline that's served me for three decades, sweetie. And I'm not about to let some Martha Stewart wannabe with boundary issues chase me off it."
Sarah sighed. "I know that tone. What are you planning?"
"Planning? Me?" I opened my kitchen drawer and pulled out the neighborhood association handbook. "Just exploring my options."
"Mom
?! I smell rats. Big ones."
"Did you know there are actually rules about barbecue smoke in our HOA guidelines? Apparently, it's considered a 'nuisance' if it 'unduly impacts neighboring properties.'"
"Okayyyy?!? Are you going to report her?"
I closed the handbook. "Not yet. I think we need to try something else first."..... (continue reading in the 1st comment)

After my husband left me because I couldn't get pregnant—"I can't wait anymore," he said—I moved back in with my parents...
05/31/2025

After my husband left me because I couldn't get pregnant—"I can't wait anymore," he said—I moved back in with my parents. For two blissful months, I felt safe.

Then my brother and his PREGNANT wife, Madison, moved in "just until renovations are done" in their house.

That's when I became HER UNPAID SERVANT.

"You're not doing anything," she said one morning. "Cook something sweet but savory. For me. And for your future niece."

She made a list:
– Chicken pot pie (no peas)
– Thai peanut noodles
– Daily snacks
– Laundry folding
– Vacuum their room
– Wipe mirrors
– Run baths
– Rub her swollen feet

And my brother?

He didn't say a word. Just scrolled his phone, nodded along with whatever Madison said, and occasionally mumbled "thanks" when I brought them their customized dinner trays.

But the FINAL STRAW came at 2:30 in the morning. Madison pounded on my door screaming with the most audacious demand. âŹ‡ïž

A mother took this photo of her daughter in the backyard and uploaded it to Facebook. As they saw the picture, friends a...
05/31/2025

A mother took this photo of her daughter in the backyard and uploaded it to Facebook. As they saw the picture, friends and relatives gasped in shock: "Don't you see it?!" Here's what they noticed in the picture: - Check the comments 👇👇

This changes everything... 😼
05/31/2025

This changes everything... 😼

The dog was taken deep into the forest and left tied to a tree, in hopes of getting rid of him forever.The dog didn’t un...
05/31/2025

The dog was taken deep into the forest and left tied to a tree, in hopes of getting rid of him forever.

The dog didn’t understand why he had been brought so far from home or why he had been tied to a tree.

Before, they would leave him on a leash outside a shop or pharmacy—he would wait calmly there, knowing they would soon return.

But here—only forest, no people, no road, just the rustling of pine trees and gnats buzzing by his ear.

He hadn’t yet grasped what was happening when he heard his owner’s voice—cold, sharp, filled with a kind of anger he couldn’t understand:

“He’s dangerous. He almost killed our Mia! I don’t feel sorry for him.”

The man was stalling for time. Even in the car he tried to object:

“Maybe it’s a misunderstanding
 We shouldn’t do this
”

But the woman was unyielding. Since morning, she had firmly decided to get rid of the dog, blaming him.

She demanded severe punishment, and now it wasn’t enough just to drop the animal off far away—she wanted Roger gone forever.

At first, the dog sat calmly as always, even wagging his tail.

He thought it was just a long walk. They had gone off to take care of something and would be back.

Even when he heard the car engine fade into the distance, he thought, “They’ll come. I just need to wait.”

The man tied him tightly to the tree, scratched his ear, let his hand linger on his head a moment—as if in farewell—and walked to his wife.

RДаd tŐ°Đ” full stօry bĐ”lĐŸw in thĐ” ŃÖ…ĐŒĐŒĐ”nts

Third marriage is shocking!
05/31/2025

Third marriage is shocking!

FATHER, 37, & HIS DAUGHTER, 9, FOUND DEAD IN A CAR AT THE PARK – WHAT HAPPENED ON THEIR WAY TO A BIRTHDAY PARTY?
05/31/2025

FATHER, 37, & HIS DAUGHTER, 9, FOUND DEAD IN A CAR AT THE PARK – WHAT HAPPENED ON THEIR WAY TO A BIRTHDAY PARTY?

Address

2563 Providence Lane
Irvine, CA
92614

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Mommy & Daddyy posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Mommy & Daddyy:

Share