I won $89 million in the lottery and told no one-felicia

They just did not know that yet.

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My name is Margaret Briggs.

I am seventy-one years old,
and the night my son asked that question,
the roast chicken smelled of rosemary,
the mashed potatoes had gone cold at the edges,
and the ice in Renee’s water glass kept cracking in a silence nobody wanted to touch.

I sat at the far end of their long farmhouse table in a polished Phoenix suburb,
passing a basket of dinner rolls like I still belonged there.

For six years,
I had lived in the guest room.

Not because I wanted to.

Not because I had nowhere else to go.

But because after my husband died,
my son Kevin insisted it was the right thing.

“Mom,” he had said back then,
“you shouldn’t be alone.”

I believed him.

At first,
it felt comforting.

I helped with groceries.

I cooked dinners.

I picked up the grandchildren from school.

I folded laundry.

Watered plants.

Babysat whenever they asked.

I tried to make myself useful.

Not a burden.

Useful.

That matters when you get older.

People stop seeing you as a person.

They start seeing you as an obligation.

A responsibility.

A problem to be managed.

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