Two days later, the situation escalated. I learned that she had been telling extended family members and close friends that I was “wrongfully” stealing her father’s money and refusing to pay for her future. She made it sound as though I was hoarding something that legally belonged to her and that I had been secretly sitting on it while she struggled.
Messages started flooding in. People called me selfish and heartless. Some even suggested that I should be ashamed for using “her dad’s money” on myself, or that I should simply be “understanding, kind” and do what my brother “would’ve wanted.” This was MY brother, and he left his money to ME.
I never agreed to be her financial safety net. I never promised to pay her tuition. What hurt the most wasn’t even the money—it was her reaction.
For illustrative purposes only
If she had approached me politely, spoken to me like a human being, or asked for help or advice, I might have tried to support her in smaller ways. But demanding money and acting as though it was owed to her completely changed everything. It turned our relationship into a transaction.
My niece still refuses to speak to me directly. Instead, she communicates through vague posts and messages passed along by other people. I keep replaying the moment she hung up on me.
That moment hurts more than the money ever could, and at this point, I feel like our relationship may be beyond repair. Sometimes, doing what’s right for yourself makes you look like the bad guy. I can live with that.
But I still wonder—am I truly in the wrong here, or are people simply choosing sides without thinking logically?
