
I always despised my older sister. That truth sits in my chest like a stone, heavy and impossible to move.
To me, she was everything I didnât want to becomeâuneducated, constantly exhausted, smelling faintly of bleach and cheap soap. She worked as a cleaner, scrubbing other peopleâs messes for a living, always counting coins at the end of the month, always worrying about debt. When friends asked about her, I avoided the topic. When classmates talked about ambitious siblings and successful families, I stayed quiet.

She was five years older than me, yet somehow felt decades behind in life. Or at least thatâs how I saw it.
I was the âsmart one.â The one teachers praised. The one with potential. From a young age, everyone said I was destined for something bigger. University. A respectable career. A future that smelled like books and offices, not disinfectant and trash bags.
My sister never argued with that narrative. She never defended herself. She just smiledâsoftly, tiredlyâand kept going.
When I received my university acceptance letter, my phone buzzed nonstop with congratulations. Friends, relatives, old classmates. And then her name appeared on the screen.
She called me that evening, her voice warm and proud.
âI knew you could do it,â she said. âIâm so happy for you.â
Something ugly rose inside me thenâpride mixed with shame, irritation mixed with superiority. I didnât want her happiness. I wanted distance.
âDonât bother,â I snapped. âGo clean toilets. Thatâs what youâre good at.â
There was a pause on the line. Just a second. Maybe two.
âOh,â she said quietly. âOkay. I just wanted to say Iâm proud of you.â
She hung up.
I didnât apologize. I didnât even think about it afterward. I told myself she deserved it. That I was just being honest. That her life choices werenât my responsibility.

Three months ago, she died.
The call came early in the morning. I remember staring at the wall while my aunt spoke, the words not fully registering. My sister. Gone. Just like that. No dramatic goodbye. No final conversation to fix things.
At the funeral, the air was heavy with grief and unsaid words. People I barely recognized cried openly. Coworkers talked about how kind she was, how she stayed late to help others, how she never complained.
I stood there numb, replaying our last conversation in my head. My words. My cruelty.
After the service, as people slowly dispersed, my aunt pulled me aside. Her eyes were red, but her voice was steady.
âNow itâs time for you to know the truth,â she said.
I looked at her, confused.
âYour sister made the biggest sacrifice of her life for you,â she continued. âYour grandmother left an inheritanceâenough money for one of you to study and build a decent future. Only one.â
My chest tightened.
âYour sister was invited to a prestigious law school,â my aunt said. âShe was accepted. She could have gone. She could have been a lawyer.â
The world tilted.
âBut she declined,â my aunt went on. âShe decided you would use that money instead. She believed you deserved it more. She believed in you completely.â

I couldnât breathe.
âShe never got a proper education or a good job because she wanted you to have it all,â my aunt said softly. âIt was a family secret. She forbade everyone from telling you. She said if you knew, youâd feel pressured. Or guilty. She wanted you to succeed freely.â
I sank into a chair, shaking.
âAll those years,â my aunt whispered, âshe was proud of you. Every exam. Every achievement. She carried your success like it was her own.â
I cried for days after that. Not quiet tearsâviolent, choking sobs that left me empty. Every memory replayed with a new meaning. Her tired smiles. Her silence. Her pride when I succeeded.
And my words.
âGo clean toilets.â
Now I study twice as hard. Every casebook I open, every lecture I attend, I think of her. I am becoming the lawyer she never had the chance to beânot because Iâm brilliant, but because she chose me.
I can never apologize to her. I can never tell her I understand now.
All I can do is live a life worthy of her sacrificeâand never forget that the person I once looked down on was the one who lifted me the highest.