Despite graduating with a 3.7 GPA while working, Athena watched as her parents celebrated Clarissa’s mediocre achievements. At twenty-four, her mother demanded $3,000 to cover a mortgage payment. Athena maxed out her credit card to help, only to see her family splurging on luxuries while she survived on ramen.
This pattern continued for eight years—$247,500 in total—while her dreams of opening a bakery were repeatedly sidelined. Meeting Marcus changed everything. He helped her track the money and recognize the imbalance in her family’s expectations.
When Clarissa got engaged, Athena was pressured into contributing $10,000—wiping out her bakery savings. Her parents skipped her wedding to attend Clarissa’s birthday party instead. Heartbroken but resolved, Athena canceled the monthly payments.
She opened Sweet Dawn Bakery, started a family with Marcus, and found real support from her in-laws. When her family confronted her publicly at the bakery, she revealed the financial truth she’d hidden for years. They left humiliated, and Athena finally broke free.
In the end, she built a life surrounded by people who valued her—not for what she could give, but for who she was. Sometimes, the family you choose is more real than the one you’re born into.