After my car acci:dent, Mom refused to take my six-week-old baby, saying, “Your sister never has these emergencies.” She went on a Caribbean cruise. From my hospital bed, I hired care and stopped the $4,500-a-month support I had paid for nine years—$486,000.

After my car acci:dent, Mom refused to take my six-week-old baby, saying, “Your sister never has these emergencies.” She went on a Caribbean cruise. From my hospital bed, I hired care and stopped the $4,500-a-month support I had paid for nine years—$486,000.

After my car acc:ident, my mother refused to keep my six-week-old son, saying, “Your sister never has these kinds of crises.”

Instead, she left for a Caribbean vacation. From my hospital room, I arranged professional care—and ended the $4,500 monthly support I had sent her for nine years: $486,000 in total.

My name is Lauren Mitchell. I was driving home from Noah’s pediatric appointment when a pickup truck ran a red light. The airbags burst open. Then there were ambulance sirens and the pale ceiling of Mercy General above me.

The doctor explained that I had a fractured pelvis and a torn ligament in my shoulder. “You’ll need several days here,” she said gently. “And you won’t be able to lift your baby for a while.”

My husband, Ethan, was stuck in Seattle due to a storm delay. Noah’s cries echoed down the hallway while a nurse awkwardly rocked him in my sister’s extra car seat.

I called my mother, Diane. She lived just twenty minutes away. For nine years—ever since Dad passed and she said she was “overwhelmed”—I’d sent her $4,500 every month to cover her mortgage, utilities, and insurance. I never questioned it. I simply paid.

She answered brightly. “Hi, sweetheart! I’m packing.”

“Mom, I’m in the hospital,” I said. “I was in an accident. I need you to take Noah tonight. Just tonight.”

There was a pause, then a familiar exhale. “Lauren, I can’t. I have plans.”

“I can’t even stand,” I whispered. “He’s six weeks old.”

“Your sister doesn’t have these emergencies,” she replied sharply. “Ashley handles her life. You always bring drama.”

“Please. Ethan can’t get here until tomorrow.”

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