You need to leave and let them figure it out. If you can afford a mortgage then go get a house or apartment they are just using you.
I Refused to Be Treated Like a Maid in My Own Home—So I Changed the Rules

Living with family as an adult is complicated. You help out, you pay your share, and somehow you still end up feeling like you don’t belong. It gets worse when the people who contribute the least have the most to say. One of our readers is dealing with exactly this. She’s been carrying the household for years but gets treated like she owes everyone. She reached out to share her story.
This is the letter she sent to us:
"Hey Bright Side,
I need to vent because I’m still shaking.
I’m 27. I moved back home three years ago after my dad asked me to help with the mortgage. I said yes because he’s my dad. I’ve been paying it ever since. Every single month. Groceries, utilities, everything. Meanwhile, my stepmom hasn’t worked a single day. She just sits around acting like she owns the place. I never said anything because I didn’t want drama.
Yesterday I came home exhausted. She handed me a chore list and said, “You owe me for living here.” I told her I’d do it later. She lost it. Started screaming about how ungrateful I am. Then she threw a mop at me and said, “Be grateful I tolerate you.” I snapped. Told her she doesn’t pay a single bill. Told her this house would be gone without me. She went red and stormed off.
That night, I heard them arguing through the wall. Then it went quiet. My dad came to my room. I thought he was coming to defend me. Finally, take my side. Instead, he looked at me and announced that I needed to apologize. “She’s my wife. You need to respect her.” Three years of paying for everything. And he wants ME to apologize. I didn’t say a word. He left. I started packing that night.
Now I don’t know what to do. Part of me wants to leave and let them figure out the mortgage themselves. Part of me feels guilty. But why should I keep paying for a house where I get treated like dirt? Am I wrong for wanting to walk away? Would you stay or just let them drown?
Mila M."
Mila, thank you for trusting us with this. What you’re going through isn’t easy. You’ve been holding that house together for three years while being treated like you don’t matter. That’s exhausting. And the fact that your dad didn’t have your back when it counted? That hurts in a way that’s hard to explain. Whatever you decide to do next, just know you’re not crazy for feeling the way you feel.

Leave, they are using you. She's being like that to keep you doing it. He wants you to apologise because he's backing her or else he'd get the grief. Have seen it before. You need to get out & don't look back. She won't change & your father is weak.
Family dynamics get messy when money is involved. You want to help, but not at the cost of your sanity. You want to keep the peace, but not by becoming a doormat. Here’s some real advice that might make things clearer.
- Know exactly what you pay for. Write it down. Every bill. Every month. If things blow up, you’ll have receipts. Literally.
- Stop expecting fairness from unfair people. If someone hasn’t respected you in three years, they won’t start tomorrow. Plan accordingly.
- Your guilt is not their leverage. Feeling bad doesn’t mean you owe anyone anything. Guilt is a feeling, not a debt.
- Have an exit plan before you need one. Start saving quietly. Look at apartments. Know your options so you’re not trapped.
- Say it once, then stop explaining. You don’t need to justify yourself over and over. “I’m done” is a complete sentence.
- Blood doesn’t mean loyalty. Family is supposed to have your back. If they don’t, that’s on them, not you.
Living with family can be beautiful, or it can be a slow drain on your soul. Emma gave everything and got disrespect in return. Now she’s deciding whether to stay or walk away. There’s no easy answer. But sometimes the hardest choice is the one that finally sets you free. What would you do in her place? Would you keep paying or let them figure it out themselves?
Read next: My Parents Abandoned Me at 18, Now They’re Begging for My Forgiveness
Comments
NO, it certainly doesn't. Being the one who is PAYING THE MORTGAGE, makes her the H B I C, (Head bitch in charge), OWN IT, HONEY.
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