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My Mother and Sister Saw Me Only as a Wallet – They Never Truly Cared to Know the Real Me

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My mother and sister saw me as nothing more than a walking walletthey never bothered to care about who I really was.

I grew up in a house that felt nothing like a home. There were just three of us: my mother, my older sister, and me. My father? A ghost from the past, a name scribbled on my birth certificate. I never knew him, and whenever I tried to ask about him, my mother would change the subject as if his very existence was forbidden.

So it was just usme, my mother, and my sister, Eleanor. She was five years older than me, but in truth, it always felt like the roles were reversed. I was the responsible one, while she was the spoiled princess of the house.

My mother adored her. Eleanor always got the nicest clothes, the most expensive gifts, anything her heart desired. Me? I had to make do with her hand-me-downsfaded jumpers with sleeves rolled up awkwardly, my mother muttering, “Thisll do for another year or two.”

Dinner? If Eleanor was hungry, she could help herself to seconds, thirds, whatever she wanted. If I dared ask for more, Id be sharply reminded of the sacrifices my mother was already making.

Birthdays? No Christmas presents, no warmthjust my mothers sighs, always making sure I knew I was nothing but a burden.

By sixteen, I understood: no one was coming to save me. My mother and Eleanor were an unbreakable pair, and I was an outsider.

So I started workingpaper rounds at dawn, scrubbing tables at a café, stacking shelves at a supermarket. For the first time, I had my own money. But to my mother, that only meant one thing.

“So, youre earning now?” she asked one evening, her voice sickly sweet. I nodded, unaware of what was coming.

She placed a hand on my shoulder. “Its time you contributed to the household.”

By “household,” she meant her and Eleanor. My sister never even considered getting a job. Why would she? Someone had always taken care of herfirst my mother, now me.

Leaving was my only choice. After school, I deliberately picked a university hundreds of miles away. It wasnt just about educationit was survival.

When I told my mother I was leaving, her face turned to ice. “Youre abandoning us? After everything Ive done?”

I nearly laughed.

I moved into a cramped student flat. For the first time, I tasted freedom. I kept workingthis time as a porter at a train station. Exhausting, but the pay was decent. I bought proper clothes, treated myself to coffee without guilt.

Did my mother or Eleanor ever call? Ask if I was okay? If I had food?

No.

The first time I visited for the holidays, my mother didnt ask how I was. She just looked me up and down and said, “Youve got money now.”

Not a question. An accusation.

Every visit after that became a battle. They needed cashEleanor wanted a new phone, new clothes. They didnt ask. They demanded.

When I told her to get a job, she laughed. “Me? Work? Are you serious?”

Then, something unexpected happened. After university, I landed a steady job, and my company offered me a flat.

It wasnt grand, but it was mine.

When my mother and Eleanor found out, they were furious. “You have a flat?! And you didnt give us anything?!”

I tried to explain it was work-provided. They didnt care.

Then, fate stepped in one last time.

My grandfathermy mothers fatherpassed away. I wasnt close to him, but he was the only one whod ever treated me kindly.

When the will was read, I couldnt believe it.

Hed left me his house and land.

My mother and Eleanor lost their minds. “Its not fair!” Eleanor shrieked. “I have a child! I need that house!”

Shed married, had a baby, divorcednow she wanted me to sell and hand her the money.

But my mind was made up.

When I told them, they exploded. My mother called me selfish. Eleanor screamed, cried, called me an ungrateful brother.

I let them rage. Then, calmly, I said:

“Im selling the house. But Im using the money to buy a bigger flat. Because Im married. And my wife is expecting.”

Silence.

No congratulations. No interest in my family.

All that mattered was they werent getting what they wanted.

That was the last time we spoke.

I sold the house, bought a home for my family.

My mother and Eleanor?

Theyve never met my son. Never tried to.

But you know what?

I dont miss them.

For the first time in my life, I know what a real family feels like.

And Ill never let my child go through what I did.

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