At thirty years old, I still needed permission — not to travel, not to stay out late, but to access my own salary.Since I began working at twenty, my mother, María, had insisted on “handling” my bank account. For the good of the family, she always said. In our house, the rule was simple and unquestioned: “Everyone contributes, and the elders decide.” My father, Javier, would nod from behind his newspaper as if my future had already been signed in invisible ink.For a decade, I played the obedient daughter. I survived on instant noodles, bought clothes from clearance racks, and treated every small desire as selfishness. Whenever I mentioned wanting my own bank card, my mother would smile with chilling serenity.
“You don’t need one. We give you what you need.”Meanwhile, my younger sister, Lucía, posted glossy photos online — designer handbags, rooftop dinners, and eventually a bright red sports car that appeared one morning in front of our building. It was described as a reward for her “hard work,” financed, of course, from “family savings.”One afternoon during my lunch break, I walked into the bank without telling anyone. The manager looked uncomfortable when he pulled up my file. My salary had indeed been deposited into my account every month for years — but nearly all of it had been automatically transferred into accounts belonging to my parents.Technically, I was the account holder.ractically, I had never touched my own money.There were signed authorizations — a vague “management clause” I didn’t remember consenting to. I requested copies of everything: statements, transfer histories, signatures. My hands shook as I stared at numbers that represented ten years of my life.