I Refuse to Drop College to Take Care of My Sick Sister, I Am Not Her Nurse

Ashley’s letter:

Hi, Bright Side,
My name is Ashley, and I worked 3 jobs through high school just to get into nursing school. I earned a scholarship, saved every dollar, and finally felt like my life was moving somewhere solid.
Then my sister got sick. Of course I care about her, and I’ve helped as much as I can, but my parents sat me down and told me I should put my education on hold to take care of her full-time.
My dad said it calmly, like it was obvious: “We can’t quit our jobs. You’re young. School can wait.” I snapped back, “My scholarship won’t.” That’s when everything shifted.
He reached across the table and slid an envelope toward me. Inside were notices showing they had canceled my phone plan, withdrawn as guarantors for my housing, and revoked access to the car I’d been using to get to work and class. I couldn’t afford to buy my own car yet.
He looked at me and said, almost smugly, “Without housing and transportation, you won’t last the semester anyway.” I felt sick. It wasn’t about helping my sister anymore.
It felt like they were forcing my hand, cutting off my independence to make sure I had no choice. I love my family, but I also worked too hard to have my future taken away like this.
Now I’m scrambling to figure out how to stay in school, keep my job, and not completely fall apart. I keep asking myself if I’m selfish for wanting my own life or if they crossed a line I can’t ignore.
— Ashley
Ashley, stop pouring into people who don’t refill you.

No you are not selfish
Your parents are
The bloody audacity of them
Shame on them
You should go to the head for school support and ask if thee is any way of continuing your education with some help for living arrangements and leave your parents to look after your sister as they are supposed to
All schools colleges and education facilities must have an aid that you can turn to and request assistance
Im quite sure if your sister knew what your parents did she would be horrified she would not expect you to give up your dreams and future aspirations for her when her parents are supposed to be doing their job
Do Not Give up
Your life is your own
You cannot feel guilty about your sister Your parents are the guilty ones
Find a principle or head of year and discuss your home situation and ask for help and guidance as this is actually neglect from your parents
Your education is your passport to freedom in this world
Any man or woman in this world can create a life It does not make them parents
No guilt no shame
You need to be selfish and take care of yourself
Request help from where you are being educated and do not allow your parents to force you into complying with their demands
Its your life take it by the reigns and br strong enough to say sorry but no
"School can wait" is the biggest lie in the book. Scholarships don't "wait." If you drop out now, you lose the funding, you lose the momentum, and you likely lose the chance to ever go back. You worked three jobs to get there; they are asking you to throw years of labor into the trash so they don't have to be inconvenienced by their own child's illness.
YOUR PARENTS ARE BRAINLESS, IGNORANT AND SELFISH. GET OUT HOWEVER YOU CAN. Even if you DO have to wait for Nursing school, you DO NOT have to put up with YOUR PARENTS BULL. IF they think that cutting you off from the support you have been receiving, they will be surprised when they realize that THEY are cut off from YOU, FOREVER. OR you can let them BULLY YOU, into giving up YOUR life goals, for HER. Ask them what they will do, when YOU can't get a job, because you spent SO LONG taking Care of your sister. Will THEY SUPPORT YOU? Would they ask HER, to give up her life, to CARE FOR YOU?
They sound like Narcissists.
That "smug" look on your father's face should be all the closure you need. This wasn't a desperate plea for help; it was a power move. He enjoyed watching the light go out of your eyes because it meant he won. If you cave now, you aren't helping your sister; you are rewarding your father’s cruelty.
You think you're "scrambling" to stay in school, but you're actually fighting for your life. If you stay with them, you aren't "taking a break"—you are entering a life of servitude. This is the moment where you decide if you are a person or a piece of property.
Ashley, thank you for trusting us with something this heavy. Anyone in your place would feel torn, angry, and scared all at once. Wanting to help your sister doesn’t mean you have to destroy your own future. Two things can be true at the same time.
First, try to ground yourself in facts, not guilt. Scholarships, housing, and transportation are not small details; they are the backbone of your education and career. As the saying goes, “Don’t set yourself on fire to keep someone else warm.” Helping family should not come at the cost of losing everything you’ve built.
When you make yourself small, others get comfortable stepping over you.

Canceling your phone and housing support the moment you showed spine is textbook financial abuse. They are weaponizing your basic needs—shelter and communication—to break your will. You don't "love" people who treat your survival as a bargaining chip.
Second, focus on practical support outside your parents. Talk to your school’s financial aid office, student services, or a counselor right away. Many colleges have emergency funds, housing options, and legal guidance for situations exactly like this. Leaning on these resources is not a failure; it’s survival.
Finally, remember that empathy goes both ways. You can care deeply about your sister while still protecting your future. If your parents are using pressure instead of partnership, it’s okay to pause, regroup, and choose a path that keeps you standing. Nursing school is not just a dream; it’s the life you fought for, and that matters.
Comments
You are training to be a nurse. You are learning the value of professional healthcare. Your parents are demanding you provide amateur, 24/7 care for free, which will eventually lead to burnout for you and subpar care for your sister. If your sister is that sick, she needs medical professionals, not a burnt-out student who has been blackmailed into the room.
"School can wait" is what broke people tell successful people to keep them broke. Scholarships have expiration dates. Clinical placements don't hold spots. If Ashley drops out now, statistically she'll NEVER go back. Her parents know this. That's why they're so calm about it.
See what financial and housing aid are available. Take out student loans if needed. Take the bus or ride a bike to get where you need to go. Put on your own oxygen mask first. If your sister is that sick she needs trained professionals caring for her.
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