Dad, the day I slipped and fell in front of Aunt’s room is the day I accidentally saw something terrible…


When I fell I only meant to get up and sneak into class, but through the crack in the door I saw something that made my chest tighten as if it were being squeezed. Aunt was standing in the middle of the living room, both hands gripping the edge of the table, her eyes rimmed with red. On the table were a stack of letters and some bank statements. She covered her face and whispered to herself as she cried: “All these years of hard work… and in the end it’s only her. He promised he would leave it, promised he wouldn’t let that woman and her child suffer… and now it’s the house for that woman’s son. How can I bear it? I raised you, I brought you up — I need a little security for my own life, don’t I?”

I stood frozen. Her words were like a knife driven straight into my heart. So the way she’s been cruel to me wasn’t because I was naughty, wasn’t because I was “unworthy” like she always announced to everyone. Aunt is afraid — afraid of having no support, afraid her old promises will be overridden, afraid her future will be empty when your strength fades. She sees me as a threat to the “security” of her life.

Then she went on, her voice hoarse as if someone were choking her:
“People say he’ll support his own the most, leave the house to his child. I’ve sacrificed so much; now I want some guarantee for my child and myself. If everyone comes asking, how am I supposed to live?”

Tears ran down my face as I listened. All those times she taunted me, took my food, made me stand for hours, those nights she opened the bathroom door to check — now there was a pattern: fear and ambition dressed up as strictness. Aunt isn’t simply “cruel” for no reason — she’s been driven to choose between looking out for herself and showing compassion, and the ones harmed are me and my younger sibling.

I felt both anger and pity. Angry because my sibling and I are paying the price for adults’ fears; pity because I see Aunt is scared of losing something too. But whatever her reasons, Dad — neither my sibling nor I deserve to be tormented or isolated so that grown-ups can fight over a sliver of safety.

I don’t want this to be written off as a misunderstanding and for everything to go on as before. I’m writing so you know the truth: Aunt’s mistreatment of me isn’t just discipline or strictness — it’s the result of a chain of worry, fear, and calculation that I can’t bear.