Three weeks ago, at my father’s funeral, my brother stood in front of forty grieving people and calmly announced that he was selling our childhood home to cover his gambling debt.
My mother didn’t look shocked.
She nodded.Then she turned toward me, in front of everyone, and said, “Your father would understand. Your sister can find somewhere else to live.”
What neither of them knew was that my father had already made sure that would never happen.
But that story didn’t begin at the funeral.It began twenty years earlier, at the dining room table in our suburban Philadelphia house, with a stack of college letters spread out in front of me and the sinking realization that being accepted was not the same as being supported.
I had gotten into Penn State, Temple, and Drexel. I had a 3.9 GPA, recommendations I had worked hard to earn, and enough determination to fill out every scholarship application I could find.
What I didn’t have was a family willing to invest in me.