“You’re nothing but an ugly college dropout. Don’t you dare show your face at this family again.”
Those were my mother’s last words to me before she slammed the door in my face. I stood there on the front porch of the house I grew up in, my suitcase at my feet, and watched through the window as my younger sister, Cassandra, laughed with our parents in the living room.
That was five years ago, and I was twenty‑two years old. My name is Athena, and I’m twenty‑seven now. Back then I was the family embarrassment—the one who didn’t measure up.
The one who was too plain, too ordinary, too much of a failure to deserve their love or support. My sister, Cassandra, on the other hand, was everything I wasn’t. Beautiful, smart, driven—and, most importantly, their golden child.
Growing up in Nashville, Tennessee, I learned early that love in my family was conditional. My parents, both successful business owners, had specific expectations for their daughters. We were supposed to be beautiful, accomplished, and perfect representations of their status.
Cassandra fit that mold effortlessly. I did not. I remember the exact moment when everything fell apart.
I was in my third year at college studying graphic design. I loved it—creating art, working with colors and shapes, bringing ideas to life on the screen. But my parents hated it.
They wanted me to study business or law—something prestigious that they could brag about at their country‑club dinners. “Graphic design is for people who can’t do real work,” my father said when I told him about my major. “You’re wasting our money on this nonsense.”
My mother was worse.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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