When Christmas Keys Exposed a Family’s Cruel Favorite Child-Ginny

My mother told everyone my younger sister was the “daughter worth sacrificing for.”

She said it so often that eventually people stopped hearing the cruelty inside it.

They heard devotion.

Image

They heard sacrifice.

They heard a mother trying to protect the child who needed more protection.

I heard the rest of the sentence every time.

If my sister was the daughter worth sacrificing for, then I was the daughter expected to be sacrificed.

That was never said directly at first.

Families like mine rarely announce their rules with honesty.

They wrap them in softer language.

“You’re the strong one.”

“You understand.”

“She needs us right now.”

“You can handle things better than she can.”

By the time I was old enough to understand what those sentences meant, I had already built my whole personality around not needing too much.

I did my homework without being reminded.

I learned to make dinner when my mother stayed late at work.

I kept my grades up because good grades were the one thing that made adults speak to me like I was not a burden.

My sister learned a different system.

She learned that crying loudly enough changed the room.

She learned that panic could become currency.

She learned that consequences were things other people absorbed for her.

When she crashed her first car, my father said accidents happened.

When she crashed her second car, my mother said she had been under pressure.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *