I Gave Up My Family for My Paralyzed High School Sweetheart – 15 Years Later, His Secret Destroyed Everything

I Gave Up My Family for My Paralyzed High School Sweetheart – 15 Years Later, His Secret Destroyed Everything

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I sat.

“He was in an accident,” I said. “He can’t walk. I’m going to be at the hospital as much as—”

“This is not what you need,” she cut in.

“You can find someone healthy.”

I blinked. “What?”

“You are 17,” she said. “You have a real future. Law school. A career. You cannot tie yourself to… this.”

“To what?” I snapped. “To my boyfriend who just got paralyzed?”

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My dad leaned forward.

“I know he’d do it for me.”

“You’re young,” he said. “You can find someone healthy. Successful. Don’t ruin your life.”

I laughed because I thought they had to be joking.

“I love him,” I said. “I loved him before the accident. I’m not walking away because his legs don’t work.”

My mom’s eyes went flat. “Love doesn’t pay the bills. Love won’t lift him into a wheelchair. You have no idea what you’re signing up for.”

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My dad’s jaw clenched.

“I know enough,” I said. “I know he’d do it for me.”

She folded her hands. “Then this is your choice. If you stay with him, you do it without our support. Financial or otherwise.”

I stared at her. “You’d really cut off your only child for not dumping her injured boyfriend?”

My dad’s jaw clenched.

The next day, my college fund was gone.

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“We are not going to fund you throwing your life away.”

The fight went in circles.

I yelled. I cried. They stayed calm and cruel.

In the end, my mom said, “Him or us.”

My voice shook, but I said, “Him.”

So I packed a duffel bag.

The next day, my college fund was gone. The account had been emptied.

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My dad handed me my documents.

“If you’re an adult,” he said, “be one.”

I lasted two more days in that house.

The silence hurt worse than their words.

“You’re family.”

So I packed a duffel bag. Clothes. A few books. My toothbrush.

I stood in my childhood room for a long moment, looking at the life I was walking away from.

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