I’ve been babysitting my single mom sister’s three kids for free, four times a week. One day, my 5-year-old nephew said he saw her hiding my “shiny money box.” I checked my closet—my cash tin, where I’d saved over $3,400 for a car, was gone.
When I asked my sister, she denied it. But soon after, she showed up with new hair, nails, and a designer bag. Then a daycare worker thanked me for paying a $600 overdue bill—which I hadn’t. My sister had told them I did.

I confronted her. She admitted to taking the money but claimed she was desperate and would pay it back. I was stunned, especially when I learned she was using my name to cover other lies—including with her exes and the daycare. I stepped back from babysitting and sent a letter to the kids explaining that I loved them but needed space. I found a tutoring job and started rebuilding.
Then my sister showed up crying. She was being audited for falsely claiming daycare expenses—and had used my name. She admitted she’d been lying to everyone to keep her life from falling apart. We made a plan: budget, support groups, job search.
I agreed to babysit twice a week with clear boundaries. Slowly, she started owning her mistakes. She even paid me back $200 and eventually got a part-time job and a donated car.
Things aren’t perfect, but she’s trying—and I’m hopeful. Setting boundaries wasn’t cruel. It was necessary. And now, we’re moving forward—together, but on healthier terms.