Zora thought her day couldn’t get worse when she found her sister and her family moving into her home without asking. But just when things seemed hopeless, an unexpected knock at the door set off a perfect dose of instant karma. Growing up, I was tight with my sister, but things shifted after she got married.
What happened a few days ago is something I’ll never forget. I’m Zora, 31, and I own a cozy three-bedroom house. It’s not grand, but it’s mine, and I’m darn proud of it.
I’ve been paying it off for ten years, working long hours to cover the mortgage. Sure, I sometimes envy my friends in their sleek downtown lofts, but then I remember this place is all mine. No landlord hassling me, no roommates leaving messes.
Just me and my space. Now, meet my sister, Maude. She’s 38, mom to two kids, and married to her high school love, Gabe.
We were close as kids, but things changed when she started her family. I didn’t hold it against her—she was building her life, and I figured that’s what people do. We grew apart, but I thought we were still okay.
Or so I believed. Maude and Gabe are the free-spirited type, always talking about “escaping the grind” and “living life to the max.”
It got on my nerves at family gatherings. “Life’s too short to be chained to a desk, Zora,” Maude would say, swirling her wine.
“You should travel, explore the world!”
I’d roll my eyes. “Some of us like a steady job and a roof over our heads, Maude.”
Gabe would jump in, “Think of the adventures! The memories!”
Memories don’t pay bills, I’d think.
I tried warning them to be smarter with their money. They were always splurging on last-minute trips or shiny gadgets, even with two kids to raise. Did they listen?
Not a chance. A few months back, they went all in. They sold their house during a market boom, planning to use the cash for a year-long “world adventure.”
I remember the call like it was yesterday.
“We did it, Zora!” Maude squealed over the phone. “We sold the house!”
“What?” I nearly spilled my coffee. “Maude, are you serious?
What about the kids’ school? Your jobs?”
“We’ll homeschool them on the road. It’ll be an education itself!
And we’ll find work later. This is our shot to really live!”
I tried to reason with her, genuinely worried. “Maude, have you thought this through?
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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