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At the time, it felt like the perfect solution. My parents had spent years trying to push me down the aisle, and when they finally decided to threaten my inheritance if I stayed unmarried past thirty-five, something inside me snapped.
Not because I cared so much about the money.
I hated that they thought they could corner me into building a life I hadn’t chosen. I hated that every family dinner had become some humiliating parade of eligible bachelors and subtle panic. To them, my single life wasn’t a choice. It was a problem to be fixed.
I was thirty-four, successful, independent, and honestly content. I had a career I worked hard for, a home I loved, routines that made sense to me, and enough peace to know I didn’t want to ruin it by marrying the wrong person out of pressure.
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