I Refuse to Help My Broke Parents, I’m Not a Free ATM

When I told my parents I wouldn’t be giving them money, they called me ungrateful. My mom said, “We struggled so you could have a better life.” But the truth is, I never had a better life growing up. I spent most of my childhood worrying about bills, food, and whether the lights would stay on.
Now that I finally make decent money, I’m choosing to protect my savings and not fix the damage their choices caused.
Hi, thank you for reading my story! Please let me know if I’m in the wrong here because it has been bothering me.
My parents were already poor and still when they chose to bring two children into the world. They always said we were “just going through a rough patch” and things will get better. That “rough patch” lasted my entire childhood.
We lived in humiliating poverty. Birthdays were just simple meals at home, no gifts, no parties, just a hug and maybe a handmade card.

If that's all they was able to do. Then that's all they could do. Im sure without a doubt they didn't enjoy it. And I'm sure stayed extremely stressed out. Wanting to give u all more. But some of us that's just not the hand we're dealt unfortunately. I guarantee u if they could of done more they would of. So absolutely your definitely in the wrong. Now I wouldn't let them take advantage of you. But if they needed help from time to time that's different. You lived it with them n had the chance to change your life while their still stuck there living it. So why not help then if you can. That's my opinion.
My dad worked petty jobs and could never land decent work. My mom used to be a painter but after kids, she just stayed home most of the time. We didn’t have savings or security, just endless stress.
I learned how to budget and stretch food supplies while other kids were going on Disney trips. People like to say growing up poor teaches you appreciation. But all it taught me was how exhausting it is to constantly live in survival mode.
I wanted OUT. I studied hard, took extra classes after school. Took up part-time work to get some pocket money on the side. Moved out of the house as fast as I could.
Now that I’m in my late 20s and working as a doctor, I finally have financial stability. It took years of college, student loans, and sleepless nights, and I’m so proud of myself. At times, I felt bad for leaving my sister behind (she’s 5 years younger), but I know she wasn’t my responsibility and neither are my parents.
The moment my parents heard I was doing well, I got a call from my mom. She begged for money, saying, “Dad’s sick! Please help.” I was startled, but then I calmed myself and said no.
It was like they were pulling me back into the same financial hole I had just climbed out of. If I give in once, they’d never stop asking me for money.
A few days later, my sister called me. I froze when I found that the truth was something else entirely. My dad wasn’t sick at all. He was being harassed by loan sharks.
Apparently, two decades ago, he took out a home loan to buy our small flat, pay for basic needs, schooling, etc. Over the years, he kept borrowing more to cover bills, repair costs, and who knows what else. He’d never finished paying it off, and the debt had spiraled. Now collectors were showing up at their door, demanding payment.

I get that they needed help but loan sharks? That's incredibly dangerous. They are never going to leave them alone until they get what they want. As for OP, they are right. They don't owe their parents any money for raising them. They can help them out to be nice but they still don't have too. And they shouldn't have lied, that would make me think twice about helping them. I bet if OP did give them some money to help them out they would keep on asking every time they ran out.
My own mother had lied to me just to get money. I wasn’t shocked that my dad had debts, I was shocked that they thought deceiving me was okay. I called her up and she broke down.
She said they’d been struggling for months, but dad didn’t want to ask me for money. Mother hid from him and called me, hoping I’d consider to help if his sickness was involved. My little sister apparently has been already helping them financially for years.
I know it sounds harsh, but I’m not responsible or strong enough to clean up decades of bad financial choices. They had time to manage money better, but they didn’t. They should’ve never had kids, or at least stopped at once.
But no. They wanted a big family that they couldn’t even afford. Is it fair to expect financial support from a child who grew up in poverty?
Read the previous letter we received from a reader, also highlighting a controversial financial choice she made: I Refused to Tip After a $250 Dinner Because the Waiter Didn’t Deserve It.
Comments
Yep, they should never have had you. I'm not saying you should financially bail them out but you could show them some empathy. They don't sound very smart, they sound like simpletons.
What a horrible human being you are. Your pardoned the best by you, but now your a doctor your family are basically the shit in your shoe. I hope your Dad gets help & your family never contact you again. Your Dad is in real danger of violence o rmore & you are prepared to let that happen. For something that kept a roof over your head for your childhood. Wow
It's sick that people here actually think that children owe their irresponsible parents. They chose to raise OP and their sister when they clearly couldn't, they aren't owed money for their own choices.
Related Reads
I Raised My Stepson Alone for 10 Years—Then He Broke Me to Pieces

I Was the Invisible Child for Years, So I Made Them Regret Ignoring Me

I Put My Family First for Years—Then They Made Me Regret It When My Wife Was Expecting

I Refuse to Give My Son’s Belongings to My Ex-Husband’s Kids—Absolutely Not

10 Stepchildren Who Opened Their Hearts to Welcome Another Parent

10 Times Arrogant People Got Humbled Faster Than Their Ego Could Recover

I Refused to Chip In for My Coworker Who Makes $40K More, Now HR Is Involved

16 Stories of Mother-in-Law Kindness That Restored People’s Faith in Family

I Refused to Knit My Coworker a Free Blanket, and Now HR Is Involved

My MIL Ignored Our Rule and Bought My Son a Puppy, She Wasn’t Ready for My Surprise

I Refused to Pay for My 80-Year-Old Nana’s Medical Bills—My Kindness Meant Nothing to Her

I Refuse to Sacrifice My Retirement to Help My Unemployed Son, I’m Not His ATM

