Birthday Betrayal: The Bank Memo That Exposed My Family-Teptep

On my 28th birthday, I saw on Instagram that my family surprised my sister with a trip to Hawaii.

My mum commented, “She’s the only one who makes us proud.”

I smiled, logged into the bank account, and clicked withdraw.

Image

Six taps later, the celebration they had staged so beautifully online was already cracking behind the scenes.

The morning had started with rain sliding down the window and the flat feeling colder than it should have.

I woke up alone, reached for my phone, and saw a message from my mother waiting on the screen.

Call your sister today. Don’t make this about you.

That was all.

No happy birthday.

No little heart.

No attempt to soften it.

Not even the casual warmth people manage for colleagues they barely like.

I stared at it until the screen went dark, then pressed my thumb against the glass to wake it again, as though a second look might make it kinder.

It did not.

I went to the kitchen and filled the kettle because moving seemed safer than thinking.

The flat was quiet in that rented-flat way, every sound too close, every cupboard door too loud, every drip from the tap sounding like a judgement.

I made tea, though I already knew I would not drink it.

Twenty-eight, I told myself.

Old enough not to need your mother to remember.

Old enough not to flinch when your family forgets you, then asks you to perform cheerfulness for someone else.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *