Alexandra finally snaps after three years of supporting her unemployed husband Leonty and his entire family, who have turned her apartment and life into their personal resource. She earns all the money, owns the apartment, and endures constant disrespect, control, and financial abuse.
One evening, she lays everything out: the expenses, the lies, the manipulation. She gives them an hour to leave. Despite threats and guilt-tripping, she throws them out—including her husband.
Life immediately improves. Alexandra restores her home, excels at work, and regains peace. Leonty later begs to return, but she refuses. Soon after, his life collapses: debts, gambling, collectors, violence, disability. His family falls apart.
Alexandra, meanwhile, rises higher—promotion, a new home, a healthy relationship built on respect. Then comes the final twist: she inherits a villa in Switzerland and millions of euros from a relative who admired her strength and independence.
Years later, Leonty struggles to survive, finally learning responsibility too late. Alexandra enjoys her life in Zurich, calm and fulfilled, surrounded only by people she chose.
Letting go of parasites didn’t ruin her life—it saved it.







