They Called Her Dream Too Risky Until Their Favorite Needed Saving-eirian

For most of my childhood, I understood my place by watching where my parents spent their hope.

My name is Ayla, and for a long time I believed being easy to raise was the same thing as being loved.

I brought home good grades because no one had to remind me.

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I learned to cook because dinner was late whenever Rosie had rehearsal.

I learned bus routes because a car for me was unnecessary, but a car for Rosie was a celebration.

When I was sixteen, I asked for help buying a used sedan with a cracked dashboard and one working speaker.

My mother said I was sensible enough to get by.

My father said responsible people did not need everything handed to them.

I nodded because nodding was easier than begging.

Three months later, Rosie turned sixteen under fairy lights in the backyard.

A new car rolled into the driveway with a ribbon on the hood.

Everyone clapped.

I clapped too, because I had already learned that pain looked worse when other people could see it.

The same thing happened with the coding program.

I found a summer course at a university that would teach app development and product design.

My mother looked at it for less than a minute.

She told me there was no need to waste money when the internet existed.

Two weeks later, Rosie flew to New York for acting camp with new luggage and a dinner at a restaurant where my parents took photos of every plate.

That was the year I stopped bringing my dreams to the dinner table.

I won a partial scholarship to a strong engineering program and moved across the country with two suitcases, a laptop, and a used backpack whose zipper stuck whenever it rained.

My parents warned me about the cost of living.

They did not host a farewell dinner.

Rosie enrolled in an arts program that cost more than my remaining tuition, and the living room filled with balloons.

I told myself adulthood would fix the old imbalance.

I thought results would matter more than sparkle.

I thought that if I built something solid enough, even my parents would have to see it.

For a while, that belief kept me moving.

After graduation, I worked in construction software, where I learned how many small companies still ran million-dollar projects through messy spreadsheets, late texts, and shouted updates in muddy parking lots.

I began building a tool at night that could help subcontractors track delays, crews, materials, and change orders in one clean place.

I called it BuildFlow.

Then eight companies told me they would sign if I could turn the prototype into a real product.

I had saved about forty thousand dollars from overtime, roommates, skipped vacations, and a life so careful it felt like holding my breath.

I still needed more.

So I did the thing I had promised myself I would never do again.

I asked my parents to believe in me.

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