“We Gave Your Ticket to My Mom – The Grandkids Love Her More.” Just Moments Later…
A New Investment
Two weeks passed. I stood at the Atlanta airport terminal again but this time the air seemed different to me. It didn’t smell of anxiety and obligations but of expensive perfume and freedom.
I was wearing a snow white pants suit and a wide-brimmed hat hiding my eyes from curious glances. Next to me stood not a brood of capricious relatives but a neat carry-on suitcase.
I waited not at the economy class check-in but in the Delta Sky Club where they served chilled champagne and canapés. Around me sat similar women, silver travelers—a club I found by chance browsing the internet that very evening of reckoning.
Independent, accomplished, free from family anchors. We were flying to Tuscany for wine tasting and painting lessons. My phone beeped.
I took it out of my purse. A message from Sterling. “Happy birthday mama. Sorry it’s late. We… we are home.”
I didn’t open the chat fully. I knew what was next: complaints, excuses, requests.
I knew their history in detail from Julian who monitored the situation to ensure my name would no longer be tarnished. They returned 3 days ago.
They had to take a loan from some shady payday lender at insane interest rates because normal banks refused Sterling due to a ruined credit history thanks to me and my administrative measures.
They bought the cheapest tickets with three layovers. Flew for two days. Slept in airports on the floor.
Now they lived in a rented two-bedroom in Stone Mountain. My house—that big bright one where everyone had their own room—was listed for sale and a buyer had already put down a deposit.
I transferred the money from the sale to my Swiss pension fund. Valencia got a job as a receptionist at a beauty salon, not in Buckhead but somewhere on the outskirts. She had to file off her manicure.
Sterling, my successful businessman, worked as a sales associate at a firm installing windows. He had to learn to talk to people not from a position of power but from the position of “the customer is always right.”
It was a cruel but necessary school. Odessa? Oh she safely flew back to Atlanta, locked herself in her apartment and changed the locks, declaring to her daughter over the phone that she wouldn’t let losers on her doorstep.
She spent the money stolen from the grandkids on a spa retreat in Florida. I looked at my son’s message. My finger hovered over the reply button.
What could I write to him? “Thank you”? “I’m glad”? “How are things?” Any answer of mine would become a thread for them, a hope, a chance to latch on again.
I pressed power off. The screen went dark reflecting my face: calm, without wrinkles of worry on the forehead.
An elegant lady with a glass in her hand approached me. This was Helena, the organizer of our trip. “Ulalia Vaughn, boarding announced. Are you ready?”
I smiled, rising. “Ready.”
We walked down the jet bridge and every step resonated in me with the ring of victory. I didn’t just save money by cancelling that trip. I didn’t just teach ungrateful children a lesson.
I made the most important investment of my life. I bought myself back.
I bought back my right to silence, my right to respect, my right to spend what I earned on what brings joy to me, not to those waiting for my death. The plane gained altitude.
I looked out the window as Atlanta turned into a patchwork quilt stitched with threads of highways. Somewhere down there in one of the gray boxes my son was currently eating reheated soup and thinking where to get money for the next loan payment.
Perhaps he was angry at me. Perhaps he hated me. But for the first time in his life he was living his life.
And maybe someday, in a year or five, he will understand that this was my most valuable gift to him: the gift of reality. The flight attendant approached me with a tray.
“Champagne ma’am?”
I nodded. “Yes please.”
I took the glass. Bubbles played in the sunlight breaking through the clouds. That trip to the Maldives was supposed to cost me $50,000 and a heap of nerves.
This ticket to a new life cost me just one tough decision. And it was the best deal of my career.
I took a sip. Ahead was Italy. Ahead was life. And it belonged only to me.
Final Thoughts
That’s the story dear friends. Harsh undoubtedly. Fair? Well here opinions I am sure will be divided.
Some will say that Ulalia Vaughn acted too cruelly abandoning her own kin, including small grandchildren in a foreign country without a dime. After all, children aren’t guilty of their parents’ greed, right? Can such a lesson be justified when the innocent take the hit?
On the other hand many of you surely applauded her decision. How long can one tolerate a consumerist attitude? How long can one be an ATM for grown healthy adults who are not only ungrateful but openly despise the giving hand?
Ulalia didn’t just close her wallet. She returned responsibility for their own lives to them. Isn’t that the essence of parenting, even if belated?
