З життя
Relatives Arrived After I Built My Seaside Home.
31August2025 Diary
I was born in a tiny village in the West Midlands. Im now twentytwo, and both my father, John, and my mother, Margaret, have passed away in the past few months. Their deaths left me free to leave the place that raised me, and I did so without looking back. Their funerals were modest; hardly anyone from the extended family turned up, despite my parents having dozens of siblings.
When the services were over, every relative rushed off to urgent business. May God watch over them. The grief was too raw, so I decided a change of scenery was the only way forward.
Back home life had never been easy. In secondary school I was constantly teased by the lads in my form, and after university and a few deadend jobs I found myself forever the goto bloke for my bosses petty errands. After a long night of thinking I sold the family cottage and bought a small plot on the coast near Brighton, where I raised a modest 150squarefoot bungalow.
Once the build was finished I snapped a few pictures and posted them on the usual socials. During construction I rang several cousins for advice, but they all claimed they knew nothing and never offered a word of help.
When summer arrived the same cousins began calling, saying they wanted to spend the holidays by the sea and asked if they could crash in my new place. I could have said yes, but why?
At the time my parents were buried, none of them could make the trip, and I received no financial help they told me they could barely keep the roof over their heads. Yet now they expected a free stay, a luxury I could scarcely afford.
That summer taught me that I have a lot of relatives, all of whom claim to love me and miss me terribly. Even a few former schoolmates started messaging, praising me, splendid work, and asking when they could visit.
I grew tired of the hypocrisy. I posted on social media that my story was a harmless fantasy, or a little white lie if you prefer. I added a photo of the shabby shack and claimed Id lost the entire inheritance on my parents house, leaving me only enough to buy this cottage, and begged anyone to drop by and maybe lend a hand fixing it. As soon as I did, the relatives and friends vanished again, citing urgent matters. Turns out they were all as broke as church mice.
Now I lie on the beach under the summer sun, pondering whether to keep flashing my pictures online. Ive decided not to wave a red flag in front of a bull to stir up envy. Perhaps next year Ill share a photo of the real house and see what truly matters to my family.
Lesson learned: people may put on smiles and promises, but true support is rarely found in those who claim to be kin; better to rely on ones own strength than on fleeting goodwill.
