I’m 17. My mom raised me alone. She’s my entire world. Last year, she was diagnosed with cancer, and I made her a promise: “If you beat this, I’ll give you the vacation you’ve never had—no chores, no stress, just peace.”
She fought, and she made it through.
So I worked nights, wrote classmates’ essays, skipped every little treat, and saved every dollar. After a year, I had $3,765 tucked away in a shoebox. It wasn’t much compared to what she deserved, but it was everything I could manage.
Then my aunt came over. She saw the money and said, “Oh honey, you’re still a minor. You can’t book anything on your own. Let me handle it.” I trusted her.
But she took my money.
Days passed. No updates. I called, asked, waited—nothing. Finally, I showed up at her house. She opened the door, sighed, and casually said, “Oh, I forgot to tell you. I needed the money. I used it for a down payment on my new car. You saved up once, save up again.” Then she slammed the door in my face.
I felt powerless. Everything I worked for, gone. But karma has a way of showing up.
Just three days later, her boyfriend asked me to help him type up a few documents. While I was at their house, I overheard them arguing—he had discovered she’d stolen from me. He was furious. Word spread through the family, and soon everyone knew what she had done.
The shame, the calls, the anger—it all came crashing back on her. Relatives who once trusted her cut ties. She lost friends, lost respect, and even her boyfriend left.
As for me, I started over. I kept working, saving little by little, and with some unexpected help from friends and family who believed in me, I finally reached my goal again. This time, no one could touch it.
Last month, I handed my mom tickets to her dream vacation. Watching her cry tears of joy made every struggle worth it.
My aunt may have taken my money—but she couldn’t take my determination. And in the end, karma took care of the rest.