My son lived in my house for ten years, but the moment he thought he’d won 90 million, he shouted, “Get out! Go to a nursing home—I’m a millionaire!” He threw out my things, treated me like nothing, and believed the money made it all his. I stayed calm and said, “Before you celebrate, check the ticket… that name isn’t yours.” That’s when everything changed.

8

At first, it was supposed to be temporary. Just a few months while he got back on his feet.

But months turned into years.

Debts piled up. Jobs came and went.

Promises were made and broken.

He spoke kindly when he needed money… and coldly when I asked for respect.

Still, I stayed patient. Because a mother always hopes her child will change.

Everything shifted the day we bought a lottery ticket.

We had gone out for bread. He only came along because he needed to borrow twenty euros.

While we were waiting, he joked,

“Buy a ticket, Mom.

Maybe we’ll get out of this life.”

I paid for it.

He picked the numbers—smiling like he already believed he had won.

I slipped the ticket into my purse… and forgot about it.

Two days later, he checked the results.

Then everything exploded.

“Ninety million!” he shouted, jumping around like a man possessed.

Within minutes, he was calling friends, bragging, planning cars, trips, luxury apartments.

And just as quickly…

He changed.

That same afternoon, he started throwing my belongings out of the bedroom.

Then the living room.

Then everything.

Boxes, clothes, documents—piled by the door.

“It’s over,” he said, right in front of the neighbors.

“You’re going to a nursing home. I run this house now. I’m a millionaire—I’m not living like this anymore.”

I didn’t cry.

I let him talk.

Let him believe he had already won everything.

Then I took a breath and said calmly:

Silence.

He looked down.

And for the first time… hesitated.

I always sign important things.

My full name. My ID.

It was written clearly on the back:

Carmen Ortega Vidal.

His reaction wasn’t shame.

It was anger.

“That means nothing!” he snapped. “I picked the numbers!”

He tried to take it.

I stepped back—and called my lawyer.

“Don’t leave.

Don’t give him anything. I’m coming,” she said.

When she arrived, she didn’t argue.

She simply checked the facts.

The signature. The purchase.

The possession.

Then she looked at him and said:

“The prize belongs to her.”

That was the truth.

And he couldn’t change it.

That night, something inside me broke—but something else finally woke up.

I realized I had confused love with sacrifice…

Patience with self-denial…

And help with dependency.

“Mom… we can split it. Fifty-fifty. Let’s forget everything.”

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇