My Family Spent My College Fund on Christmas for Years—Now They Want My Help

Family & kids
2 months ago
My Family Spent My College Fund on Christmas for Years—Now They Want My Help

Family conflict over money often exposes deeper issues like parental entitlement, broken trust, and emotional manipulation. When adult children set financial boundaries, old wounds resurface, forcing painful choices between self-protection, guilt, and the idea of family loyalty.

Letter for Bright Side:

Hello, Bright Side,

Throwaway here because I have nowhere to complain. So, this is messy.

Growing up, I had a college fund my mom set up before she passed. Not huge, but enough to help. After my dad remarried, my stepmom basically took over finances.

Every single year around Christmas, about $5k from that fund would disappear. Decorations, gifts, trips. I asked questions. I pushed back. My dad always shut it down with “It’s family money” or “We’ll make it up later.”

Spoiler: they never did. They went bankrupt while I was still in school. The college fund was gone.

I worked three jobs to get through school. I missed parties, holidays, sleep, everything. Eventually I just went low contact, because the resentment was eating me alive. Years went by.

I’m finally stable. Not rich, but okay. Recently, my dad reached out of nowhere asking for $40,000. Said it was a “loan” but wouldn’t explain what for.

I said no. Calmly, no fuss. That was that, or so I thought.

The next day, I opened my door and literally froze. My dad and stepmom were standing there. It turned out they pressured my aunt into giving them my address.

Before I could even process it, my dad snapped, “You’re still holding onto that college fund thing? We fed you and gave you a roof for 18 years!” He went on about how food, shelter, clothes, blah blah blah were “worth way more” than the money they took.

Please stand your ground. You don’t owe them ANYTHING, not money, love or loyalty. They are greedy and entitled people who’ve already shown their true colors. Go NC with them for your own sanity and peace. They don’t even deserve to have you in their lives. Congratulations to you for overcoming the hardship they caused you and stealing your late mother's college fund she set up for you. Kick them to the curb. If you give in, they’ll never stop, they’ll treat you like a permanent source of income for them. Go on with your own life and don’t look back.

Ppl like that don’t ever change, they obviously don’t know how to manage money, they are disrespectful, dishonest, and just horrible. Run away from them and keep your distance.

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Said I need to “grow up” and “help my family” instead of living in the past. I didn’t even yell. I just told them to leave and closed the door. Then I sat on the floor for, like, an hour, feeling 12 years old again.

Now I’m spiraling. Part of me feels justified. Another part feels like absolute garbage because... yeah, he’s my dad.

So, Bright Side... Am I wrong for refusing to help them financially and cutting contact again? Should I have handled this differently, or is this as messed up as it feels?

Best,
G.

That woman stole from you and your Father allowed it. Stand your ground you are where you are because of you, no-one else. Do not give them a penny. Wishing you luck in your future.

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Your stepmother should not have used your college fund money, and your dad should certainly not have allowed her to. How dare she!! Stand your ground. They owe you that money. You must think of your future. Obviously you can't rely on them. If you give in now, they will always take from you. All the very best for your future.

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They're claiming you owe them for basically giving you life and raising you and making sure you got what you needed. First of all it was their choice to have children not yours. Secondly raising you and providing you with what you needed was their job not yours. Stand your ground. You owe them nothing.

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apparently you are only needed when it comes to begging money from you.
Don't feel guilty, they have put themselves in the situation they are in and have nothing to do with you.
But I would probably warn the bank etc. so they don't take out loans in your name... contacting a lawyer is not wrong either...

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You did the right thing. They stole from you and you didn't call the cops that was your grace to them.

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2 months ago
Was there a comment here?

Buy megaphone for next time they visit. Shame them by yelling "HEY, LOOKIE HERE ! THERE'S A PARENT IN HERE STEALING MY COLLEGE FUND FOR YEARS AND STILL DEMANDING $40000 FROM ME ! SHOULD I CALL POLICE TO JAIL THEM OR NOT ?" This will shave all their dignity as parents and as human being, also killed in their social life. They will not dare to visit you anymore.

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Don't ever take on another man's trash. That ain't your pile to carry. What was said and done was wrong and not your fault, deep down, buddy you know it.

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The fund was for your education not so your parents could pretend to be rich at Christmas, you are well within your rights to tell them to take a long walk off a short pier. Your late mother left it to you for your future and it became obvious why it wasn't supposed to be in your father's care. Your parents are legally supposed to take care of you till you are of age. By the sounds of it the money had all but been frittered away by that time. You clawed your way to where you are by your own hard work. Screw'em. Living a good and happy life is the best revenge against these leeches. You don't owe them the time of day, let alone money.

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You were a child, your father was supposed to look after you and you don't owe him anything.

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dad fed and housed for 18 years food and shelter are part of parenting, not loans. Calling that ‘entitlement’ because they made poor money choices is twisted.

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You are usually quite clear in your support of the offending parents, but on THIS STORY, I can't be sure. The parents WERE COMPLETELY WRONG AND THEY STOLE MONEY FROM A CHILD. Just in case you aren't sure, either.

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Thank you so much for trusting us with your story. We know it’s not easy to open up about something this personal, and we really appreciate your honesty.

  • You’re not “petty,” you’re remembering — Listen, holding onto something that wrecked your future isn’t immaturity, it’s memory. People love calling it “the past” when they weren’t the ones paying for it. You don’t need to justify why that still hurts.
    Practical move: stop arguing facts with them and start enforcing boundaries. You don’t owe explanations to people who already decided you’re wrong.
  • Food and shelter aren’t a debt you repay — Yeah, they fed you. That was literally the minimum requirement of being parents, not some long-term loan with interest. When someone throws that line at you, it’s usually because they’ve got nothing else.
    If it comes up again, don’t debate it; just disengage. A simple “I’m not discussing money or the past anymore” shuts the door without feeding the drama.
  • Showing up unannounced is a line crossed — Showing up at your door after you said no? That’s not desperation; that’s entitlement. And forcing your aunt to give up your address is next-level not okay.
    Action step: protect your space. If you haven’t already, tell trusted relatives not to share your info. You’re allowed to lock this down without feeling dramatic.

These situations, while painful, can also be turning points for clarity, healing, and healthier boundaries. With time, support, and self-respect, it’s possible to move forward without carrying the weight of someone else’s choices.
Read next: I Refuse to Be My Stepmom’s Free Maid This Christmas—Now the Family Is in Crisis

Comments

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I get holding boundaries, but demanding $40k back and making your dad look like a villain online? That’s harsh. Family helping each other isn’t always neat maybe therapy is the answer, not cutting contact.

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I bet they won't stop bugging you. Ever. Consider moving if you're able to do it, and don't tell ANYONE.

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They misappropriated funds left to you. Consult attorney to see if there are ways to compel them to pay it back with interest.

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I didn't have to read it all.
Tell them to shove off and blood is not thicker than water guilt tripping must stop now.

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Go no contact. They stole from you for years while you were still a child. Money your mother left so you would have it when you needed it for college. You owe them nothing but contempt - and possibly a lawsuit. Talk to a lawyer, get a restraining order if you have to. They crossed every line. Cut them off and move on. Blood makes you related, it doesn't make you family.

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