For most people, parents are supposed to protect you from the world. Mine used me as a financial shield. I thought the worst they could do was blow rent money on designer purses while the lights got cut off. I was wrong — they stole something much bigger: my identity.
After years of scraping by, paying off my own medical debt, I thought my tax refund would finally set me free. Instead, I got a letter from the courthouse: Funds seized to settle debts under my name.
When I called, my mom brushed it off: “Yes, we used your name. You’re my daughter, it’s your job to help this family.” My dad yelled in the background about how they’d “kept a roof” over my head. That “roof” was evictions, power shut-offs, and me doing homework by candlelight.
Court records showed the lawsuit had been hidden from me for a year. Every notice? Signed by my mother. My tax refund and wages? Gone. When I confronted them, I was met with sneers, guilt trips, and even threats: “Family doesn’t drag family through the mud.”
But I wasn’t a kid anymore. With my lawyer’s help, I filed a police report, froze the garnishments, and subpoenaed the mail records. The evidence was undeniable — my parents had committed identity theft.
Their reaction? More guilt trips. My mom sobbed about “sacrifice,” my dad sent me an “invoice” for raising me, and my sister called me ungrateful. I blocked them all.
The truth is, they didn’t just steal my money. They stole my trust. And trust, once broken, is gone.
When my mom hissed one last time, “Family is all you have,” I answered calmly: “No. Family is earned.”