Growing up, the rules in my house were clear: my brother was the priority. My parents fully funded his education—tuition, books, living expenses, everything. When I asked my father if they would help me too, he looked me in the eye and said, “You’re a girl, Anna. You’ll just get married. There’s no point in wasting money on your school.”
That rejection fueled a fire in me. I spent years struggling, working multiple jobs, and taking out loans while scraping by to put myself through medical school. I didn’t have a safety net, but I did have a goal. Today, I am a successful surgeon. I also met and married a wonderful man who happens to be quite wealthy.

Recently, my mother called me out of the blue. She wasn’t calling to congratulate me on my career; she was begging me to lie to my in-laws. Apparently, my in-laws had found out the truth about my parents’ blatant discrimination and were disgusted by it. My parents, suddenly feeling the “shame” of their choices, wanted me to tell everyone that they did fund my education after all.

But the audacity didn’t stop there. Now, my parents are demanding that I support them financially. Their logic is as twisted as it gets: they claim that because they raised me to be “someone who could attract a rich husband,” I owe them for my current lifestyle. They believe my success is a direct result of their “parenting,” even though they actively tried to limit my future.
I told them no. I refused to lie for them, and I certainly refused to bankroll them. I am a surgeon because of my own sweat and tears, not because of a “marriage strategy” they supposedly planned. They wanted to invest in my brother and leave me with nothing; now, they can look to him for their retirement fund.
I’m done playing along to “keep the peace.” The peace was broken the day they decided my dreams weren’t worth the investment because of my gender.