My Parents Kicked Me Out Because My Entitled Twin Got Pregnant, Now They Have... Reddit Stories

117.99k views5186 WordsCopy TextShare
T Stories
A story about entitled parents on reddit: OP, an unwanted twin, experienced favoritism and neglect t...
Video Transcript:
my parents kicked me out because my entitled twin got pregnant then showed up at my door years later and demanded to move in I'm 28m with a story that sounds like it's straight out of a TV show but trust me every word is true and I've got the emotional scars to prove it imagine growing up knowing you weren't wanted not in the oops we forgot to use protection kind of way but in the we would have terminated you if you were aone way yeah that's me The Unwanted half of a twin set my parents wanted
a daughter and they got one along with the bonus package of yours truly for years I carried this knowledge like a boulder on my chest it colored every interaction every family dinner and every birthday celebration the resentment festered growing Roots deep into my psyche I'm not writing this from a place of anger anymore no I'm writing this as someone who's crawled through the trenches of family toxicity and emerged on the other side battered but unbroken this is a story about favoritism taken to the extreme it's about a childhood where hand me downs weren't just clothes
but a way of life it's about being pushed out of your own home and finding strength in the most unlikely places but most importantly it's about learning that sometimes the family you choose is more valuable than the one you're born into so if you've ever felt like the black sheep the unwanted child or just someone struggling to find their place in a world that seems stacked against them this story is for you it's not a tale of overnight success or easy solutions it's messy it's painful and at times it might make your blood boil let
me take you on a journey through the ups and downs of my life from sleeping in a tent in my parents backyard to buying my own house from feeling worthless to standing up for myself Against All Odds it's been a hell of a ride and I'm finally ready to share it with you all growing up our house wasn't just divided it was a fortress with me on the outside from day one it was clear who the star of the show was and spoiler alert it wasn't me my twin sister might as well have been an
only child for all the attention and love she received you know how some kids get the Lion Share of their parents affection well my sister got the whole damn Zoo new clothes she had a wardrobe that would make a Disney princess jealous meanwhile I was lucky if I got a pair of new socks for Christmas and birthday Oh you mean that day when my sister got showered with gifts while I got well older but it wasn't just about the material things no that would have been too simple it was the little things the day-to-day reminders
that I was The Unwanted tagalong in this family portrait my sister's toys were sacred relics not to be touched by my unworthy hands heaven forbid I so much as breathe near her dollhouse you'd think I was trying to burn down the actual family home meal times were a special kind of torture my sister would get first pick of everything the choicest cuts the largest portions me I got whatever was left served with a side of be grateful you're getting anything at all I learned early on that in this house some were more equal than others
school was no refuge either parent teacher conferences were a joke my parents would gush over my sister's Finger Paintings like they were Picasso Originals while my report card might as well have been written in invisible ink for all the attention it got why can't you be more like your sister became the unofficial family motto tattooed on my psyche in permanent ink In This Storm of favoritism and neglect there was one Beacon of light my grandfather he was the only one who saw me really saw me with him I wasn't The Unwanted twin or the family
disappointment I was just me he taught me to fish told me stories about his Youth and for a few precious hours each week made me feel like I mattered but life has a cruel way of taking away the good things doesn't it when I was 13 my grandfather passed away it was like someone had snuffed out the only light in my Dark World the one person who made me feel worthy gone and with him went any semblance of balance in our lopsided family Dynamic after his death the contrast became even Starker my sister's achievements were
celebrated with parades while my existence was tolerated at best family photos let's just say I have a great collection of pictures of my elbow or the back of my head I was the family ghost present but never really seen or heard every day was a reminder that I was the spare the backup the just in case child the resentment grew inside me like a weed choking out any hope or self-esteem that tried to take root I dreamed of the day I could leave counting down the years months weeks until I could escape this house that
never felt like home just when I thought life couldn't get any more twisted my sweet 16 rolled around with a bang and I mean that literally While most kids were dreaming about driver's licenses and first cars my dear twin sister decided to shake things up by getting knocked up yep you read that right at 16 my sister managed to get pregnant by some 19-year-old High School Dropout who probably couldn't spell condom if his life depended on it now in any normal family this might have been a cause for concern maybe even a Stern talking too
about life choices and responsibilities but not in the Bizarro world that was my family no my parents reacted to this bombshell as if my sister had just won the Nobel Prize their precious little girl was having a baby cue the fireworks and roll out the red carpet before you could say teen pregnancy my parents had orchestrated a shotgun wedding that would have made Las Vegas proud they married off my 16-year-old sister to this barely adult boy f faster than you can microwave a burrito and just like that our family of four became a family of
5 and a half my parents decided that the newlyweds needed a proper place to start their family and we're better than right here in our cozy little house the same house that was already bursting at the seams with the four of us their solution simple I had to go that's right folks in the blink of an eye I went from unwanted child to homeless teenager my room the one Sanctuary I had in this hell hole of a home was unceremoniously handed over to my sister and her baby daddy my belongings tossed into garbage bags and
dumped in the backyard like yesterday's trash I still remember the conversation if you can call it that my mother with a smile that could curdle milk told me your sister needs the space now you're old enough to find a place for yourself aren't you old enough I was 16 for crying out loud the same age as my pregnant sister but apparently that didn't matter I was 16 years old standing in our backyard with my life in garbage bags wondering what the hell I was supposed to do next the resentment that had been simmering for years
suddenly boiled over I was angry no I was furious at my parents at my sister at her loser boyfriend at the whole damn world with nowhere else to go I did the only thing I could think of I set up a tent in the backyard yeah you heard that right while my sister was getting her room redecorated for the baby I was learning how to waterproof a tent talk about a crash course in adulting living in a tent in your own backyard is a special kind of humiliation I could hear the family dinners through the
walls of the house smell the home-cooked meals I was no longer welcome to share winter was the worst have you ever tried to do homework by flashlight while wearing three layers of clothes because it's freezing outside let me tell you it's not conducive to academic success school became a joke how could could I focus on algebra when I was worried about whether my tent would still be standing when I got home my grades plummeted but of course no one noticed they were all too busy cing over my sister's growing belly but life has a way
of throwing you a Lifeline when you least expect it for me it came in the form of a local bakery I'd been scrounging for odd jobs anything to earn a few bucks for food and supplies the owner a Gruff old guy named Frank caught me eyeing the day old bread one evening instead of chasing me off he offered me a job it wasn't much just sweeping floors and helping with deliveries but it came with a perk that felt like winning the lottery a small room above the bakery where I could sleep no more tent no
more shivering through the night I had a roof over my head even if it did smell like sourdough all the time I dropped out of high school soon after it wasn't an easy decision but let's face it my education had taken a backseat to survival a long time ago besides working at the bakery taught me more about life and hard work than I ever learned in a classroom Frank became the father figure I never had he was tough sure but fair he taught me the value of hard work the importance of showing up on time
and how to make a mean apple turnover for the first time in my life I felt like I had value I wasn't just The Unwanted twin or the family disappointment I was a worker a learner someone with potential the irony wasn't lost on me here I was the black sheep of the family working my ass off and learning real life skills while my Golden Child sister was playing house on my parents dime the resentment was still there a constant companion but it was joined by something new a fierce determination to prove them all wrong every
early morning shift every late night cleaning up every new skill I mastered was a middle finger to the family that had tossed me aside I promised myself that one day I I'd have more than just a room above a bakery I'd have a life they could only dream of and I'd do it all on my own life has a funny way of surprising you you know one day you're sleeping in a room that smells like yesterday's bread and the next you're walking into a car plant palms sweaty hoping for a chance that's where my story
took its next turn I won't lie leaving the bakery was tough Frank had become more of a father to me than my own ever was but we both knew I couldn't spend my life covered in flour so when I heard the car plant was hiring I figured why not the worst they could do was say no right turns out they said yes I started on the assembly line and let me tell you it was a whole different world from kneading dough the noise the pace the pressure it was overwhelming at first but you know what
I loved it every car that rolled off that line felt like a big middle finger to everyone who'd ever doubted me I threw myself into the work learned every job on that line stayed late came in early the guy started calling me the machine not very creative I know but hey I'll take it over The Unwanted twin any day and people noticed my supervisors the plant manager even the big bosses from corporate when they visited 3 years in they offered me a supervisor position me the high school dropout now responsible for an entire shift I
almost laughed in their faces not because it was funny but because if my family Could See Me Now well let's just say it would have been sweet but success didn't magically erase all those years of hurt every promotion every pay raise every good job from the higher ups a part of me was still that kid in the tent desperate for approval I'd lie awake at night imagining scenarios where I'd run into my family show off my success make them regret everything the real game changer came 5 years in I'd been saving every penny living like
I was still in that room above the bakery and finally I had enough I bought a house nothing fancy mind you a modest three-bedroom in a decent neighborhood but it was mine all mine the day I got the keys I stood in the empty living room and just broke down laughed cried probably looked like a lunatic to the neighbors but in that moment all I could think was I did it without them despite them for the first time in my life I had a real home a place where I belonged where no one could kick
me out or make me feel unwanted it wasn't just a house it was a giant screw you to everyone who'd ever made me feel small as I started Furnishing the place buying things I'd only dreamed of owning a part of me wished I could invite Frank over show him what his kindness had helped create but another part well another part was waiting waiting for the day when my so-called family would find out because deep down I knew it was only a matter of time before they came knocking wanting a piece of what I'd built and
when that day came I'd be ready you know that feeling when you're watching a horror movie and you just know something bad is about to happen that's how I felt the day my doorbell rang unexpectedly call it a sixth sense call it paranoia but something in my gut told me this wasn't going to be the neighbor asking to borrow a cup of sugar I opened the door and there they were my personal horror show in the flesh mom dad my sister her husband and was that three kids four I lost count they stood there grinning
like they just won the lottery in a way I guess they thought they had surprise my mom chirped as if the last decade of neglect and abandonment was just a silly misunderstanding we heard you bought a house how wonderful I stood there Frozen I wanted to slam the door in their faces and break down and demand answers for all those years of pain instead I just stared my hand gripping the doorknob so tight my Knuck Les turned white my sister pushed past mom her latest baby perched on her hip nice place bro she said eyeing
the foyer like she was appraising it bet you've got plenty of room huh and there it was the real reason for this little family reunion I felt my jaw clench years of resentment bubbling up like lava in my chest dad cleared his throat always the Diplomat son we thought well with your sister's family growing and this big house of yours maybe it's time to let bygones be bygones family should stick together after all I almost laughed family since when had I been family to them but I bit my tongue years of suppressing my feelings kicking
in automatically what exactly are you suggesting I managed to ask my voice surprisingly steady mom beamed clearly taking my question as encouragement well we thought we could all move in here wouldn't that be lovely one big happy family Under One Roof One Big Happy Family the words echoed in my head each repetition stoking the fire of resentment that had been burning for years images flashed through my mind sleeping in a tent working Dawn till Dusk at the bakery the countless nights I'd cried myself to sleep wondering why I wasn't good enough and now here they
were standing on the porch of the home I'd built with my own Sweat and Tears asking no demanding to be let in to take over to push me aside again I felt something snap inside me years of pent up anger hurt and resentment came pouring out no I said my voice low but firm absolutely not the smiles faltered mom looked like I'd slapped her but but we family she sputtered family I laughed but there was no humor in it where was this family when you kicked me out at 16 where was this family when I
was sleeping in a tent in the backyard where was this family when I was working my ass off at the bakery or pull pulling double shifts at the plant they stood there shocked into silence for once I had their full attention this house this life I've built I did it all on my own without you despite you and now you think you can just walk in and claim it like you have any right to it my sister stepped forward her face Twisted in that familiar pout that had always gotten her whatever she wanted come on
don't be selfish we need the space you owe us I owe you the words came out as a near growl I owe you nothing not a damn thing you want space go find it somewhere else this is my home and you're not welcome here Dad puffed up his face reading now listen here boy no you listen I cut him off I'm not a boy anymore I'm a man who's done just fine without you and I'll continue to do fine without you now get off my property before I call the cops they stood there gaping as
if they couldn't believe what they were hearing as if the idea that I might refuse them had never crossed their minds and you know what it probably hadn't leave I said my voice quiet but filled with steel now slowly disbelievingly they turned and walked away I watched them go my heart pounding hands shaking as their car pulled away I closed the door and leaned against it sliding down to sit on the floor I'd done it I'd finally stood up to them the relief was overwhelming but so was the sadness not for losing them I'd lost
them years ago no I was mourning the family I never had the support I'd never known you'd think that after being told to leave in no uncertain terms my family would have gotten the message but if there's one thing I've learned it's that toxic people don't give up easily they're like weeds you think you've gotten rid of them but they always find a way to creep back in it was about a week after The Uninvited visit I was just starting to relax to believe that maybe just maybe I'd finally closed that chapter of my life
I should have known better I woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of breaking glass at first I thought I was dreaming some residual nightmare from my days of sleeping in a tent maybe but then I heard voices hushed but familiar my sister's shrill whisper her husband's low Grumble for a moment I just lay there Frozen this couldn't be happening they couldn't be this crazy this entitled but as I heard footsteps creeping up the stairs reality sank in they were really doing this they were breaking into my home I got up
my heart pounding so hard I could feel it in my throat I grabbed my phone ready to call the police but something stopped me some misguided sense of family loyalty maybe or perhaps I just couldn't believe it had come to this I stepped out into the hallway and there they were my sister her husband and two of their kids were loaded down with bags and suitcases they froze when they saw me like deer in headlights What followed were shouting accusations and threats my sister ever the victim wailed about how I was leaving them homeless how
I was tearing the family apart her husband emboldened by liquid courage got in my face telling me I had no right to keep them out years of pent up rage and hurt came boiling to the surface I yelled back told them exactly what I thought of their entitlement their audacity it got heated it got physical in the scuffle I got shoved hard I stumbled backward my head connecting with the corner of a wall pain exploded behind my eyes and I felt warm blood trickle down my neck that was the last straw dazed and angry I
finally did what I should have done the moment I heard the glass break I called the cops what happened next was like something out of a bad TV drama the police arrived Sirens blaring lighting up the quiet Suburban Street my sister and her husband immediately started spinning Tails how I had had invited them how I had attacked them but they hadn't counted on one thing my neighbors Mrs Harrington from next door had seen the whole thing she'd watched them break in heard the shouting and seen me stumble out onto the front lawn bleeding her testimony
along with the broken window and my injury was all the police needed I pressed charges it wasn't an easy decision but as I watched them being led away in handcuffs I knew it was the right one enough was enough it was time to set boundaries not just with words but with actions I got a restraining order against my sister and her husband it felt surreal taking legal action against my own family but with each passing day I felt a little lighter a little Freer just when I thought the dust had settled just when I was
starting to believe that maybe finally I could move on with my life they struck again this time it was my parents they showed up on a Sunday afternoon looking older and more Haggard than I remembered for a moment I felt a Pang of something not quite sympathy but an echo of the connection we once had or should have had but then they started talking and any warm feelings quickly evaporated they had a whole sob story prepared how they were getting old how they couldn't support my sister and her family anymore how they were struggling financially
how they needed a place to stay it was manipulation pure and simple they hit all the classic guilt triggers family obligation respect for elders the struggles of old age they painted themselves as victims of circumstance conveniently forgetting their role in creating the very situation they were complaining about I listened more out of shock than anything else the audacity was breathtaking here they were the people who had kicked me out at 16 who had chosen my sister over me time and time again asking for my help demanding it really under the guise of family Duty I
stood there listening to their practiced speech something strange happened I felt the old anger the old hurt but it was different now distant somehow like looking at an old photograph of yourself and barely recognizing the person in it I realized in that moment that I pied them these sad manipulative people who had never learned to take responsibility for their actions who had burned every bridge and were now surprised to find themselves alone but pity didn't mean I owed them anything it didn't erase the years of neglect the favoritism the pain they had caused and it
certainly didn't mean I had to let them into my life or my home so I told them no calmly firmly Without Anger or resentment I explained that while I understood their situation I wasn't responsible for solving it I reminded them of our history of the choices they had made I made it clear that while I didn't wish them ill I also didn't want them in my life they didn't take it well of course there were tears accusations attempts at guilt tripping but I stood my ground and when they finally left I didn't feel guilty I
felt relieved empowered it was a turning point for me standing there on my porch watching them drive away I realized something important the resentment the anger that had driven me for so long it wasn't gone exactly but it no longer controlled me I had built a life for myself a good life despite everything they had done I had won not by proving anything to them but by Living Well in spite of them update it had been months since the break-in incident and my parents failed attempt to move in the dust had settled and I'd been
focusing on moving forward building a life that was truly mine I was learning to let go to find peace not in forgiveness but in acceptance of what had happened and who I'd become because of it in a moment of what I can only describe as misguided nobility I decided to visit my sister in jail maybe it was closure I was after or maybe some part of me still clung to the idea of family whatever it was I found myself sitting across from her in a sterile visitation room the years of hurt and betrayal a palpable
presence between us she looked different harder older the sparkle of the favored child long gone from her eyes we sat in uncomfortable silence for what felt like an eternity I was about to leave wondering what I'd been thinking coming here when she spoke what came out of her mouth next shook me to my core with a bitter laugh she revealed a truth that I never saw coming our grandfather the only person who'd ever shown me real love and support hadn't forgotten me after all he left me an inheritance a substantial one at that the shock
must have Shone on my face because she continued her words dripping with the same entitlement that had characterized our entire relationship she spilled it all how our parents had hidden the will how they'd been using my money all these years the house I'd slept outside of in a tent technically it had been mine the money that had funded her weddings her husband's failed business ventures her children's expensive clothes all from my inheritance I sat there stunned as the implications washed over me every struggle every hardship I'd faced sleeping in a tent working countless hours at
the bakery scraping by to afford my education none of it had been necessary I'd had the means to support myself all along but it had been stolen from me by the very people who should have protected me the weight of this betrayal was almost too much to bear years of gaslighting of being told I was selfish for not helping the family of being made to feel worthless it all came crashing down on me the audacity the sheer cruelty of what they'd done it was breathtaking my sister oblivious to the storm raging inside me seemed to
think this Revelation would provoke me would reignite the family drama perhaps she thought I'd break down or lash out in anger maybe she was hoping to manipulate me into helping her again dangling this information is bait but she'd miscalculated badly the last lingering threads of familial obligation of misplaced loyalty snapped I felt a cold calm Clarity wash over me without a word I stood up and walked out her calls echoing behind me armed with the information my sister had unwittingly provided I began the process of unraveling years of financial deceit it wasn't just about the
money though that was rightfully mine it was about Justice about finally standing up and saying no no more I sued them all of them my parents my sister her husband everyone who had benefited from the theft of my inheritance the family that had discarded me that had seen me as nothing more than a resource to be used and tossed aside was about to face the consequences of their actions as news of the lawsuit spread extended family members and old acquaintances came out of the woodwork some offered support others condemnation I was called greedy ungrateful told
that I was tearing the family apart but for once those words held no power over me I knew the truth and I was done letting their narrative control my life the lawsuit became a media sensation in our small town people love a good David versus Goliath story and that's how it was painted the abandoned sun rising up against those who had wronged him I tried to ignore the attention focusing instead on the legal battle ahead it was a long draining process every day brought New Revelations new depths to my family's betrayal the house my grandfather
had lived in the one full of warm memories of the only adult who'd ever truly cared for me had been sold the money which should have set me up for a comfortable life had been frittered away on frivolous expenses and bad Investments as I write this this the lawsuit is ongoing the wheels of Justice turn slowly but they are turning I don't know what the outcome will be how much if anything I'll recover but in a away that's not the point anymore I don't know what the future holds the hearing is next week and regardless
of the outcome I know my life will never be the same but for the first time and as long as I can remember I'm not afraid I'm ready to face whatever comes next on my own terms to be continued maybe life has taught me that you never really know what's waiting around the next corner but whatever it is I'll face it Standing Tall secure in the knowledge of who I am and what I'm worth and isn't that the greatest inheritance of all
Copyright © 2024. Made with ♥ in London by YTScribe.com