When my sister-in-law Brianna texted asking me to watch her three kids for “just an hour,” I canceled dinner plans with a friend and said yes.
She dropped them off with a big smile — and never came back that night. By bedtime,
I was knee-deep in spaghetti stains, toddler tantrums, and a 2 a.m. puke cleanup.
I called and texted her repeatedly, but she didn’t answer.
The next morning, at 9 a.m., she finally waltzed in — wearing a bridesmaid dress, Starbucks in hand, acting like nothing had happened.
“You’re a saint,” she gushed, handing me a glittery bath bomb as thanks.
That was the last straw.
That afternoon, I sent her and my brother an invoice: every hour, every meal,
every ounce of stress — totaling $620.
Her shocked call came minutes later: “Are you insane? Family doesn’t charge family!” “No,” I said calmly.
“Family doesn’t lie about a quick errand and disappear overnight.”
She hung up furious, but an hour later, my brother paid the invoice — plus a $30 tip.
Now, the unused bath bomb sits on my bathroom shelf as a reminder:
kindness without boundaries isn’t kindness — it’s permission to be used. And I’m done being used.