I was stunned. Jason’s parents, aunts, even his older sister—none of whom had ever been particularly involved with us—suddenly felt they had a stake in our money. I calmly repeated, “The fund is only for education. That’s what it was built for. That’s what it will be used for.”
Maddie, arms crossed, stared at me like I’d just betrayed her. “You’ve helped Kate with tuition, why can’t you help us with a down payment? We have kids, Mom.”
I reminded her, gently but firmly, “You made different choices, Maddie. That doesn’t mean we love you any less. But this fund has a purpose. It’s not a general bailout. If you want to go back to school, it’s there for you. That’s always been true.”
Jason muttered something under his breath, and then his mom snapped, “So you’re punishing her for being a mom? For not being a perfect little college girl like Kate?”
“No,” I said, trying to stay calm. “I’m not punishing anyone. But it’s not about choices being right or wrong. It’s about staying true to what that money was set aside for.”
The next week was a blur. Maddie stopped returning my texts. Jason blocked both me and my husband. I found out later from Kate that Maddie called the whole thing “a betrayal,” and that Jason’s family was talking about taking us to court—even though there was nothing legally promising them a dime.
My husband and I sat down with a lawyer just to make sure the funds were protected. We even added clauses ensuring they’d only be released for accredited education expenses. It was heartbreaking to go to those lengths, but after that outburst, we felt we had to.
Kate asked me later, “Do you think Maddie will come around?”
I didn’t have an answer.
But I knew one thing: setting boundaries doesn’t mean you love your child any less. Sometimes it means you love them enough to say no.