06/11/2026
"You're always glued to your monitors anyway, Nora, we just figured a beach trip would stress you out."
My cousin Derek leaned against his new landscaping truck in my driveway.
"It's better this way," he said pleasantly.
"You get to relax at home, and Maya won't have to deal with all the younger kids."
I stood in the Arizona heat.
I looked at the shiny chrome on his new truck.
I did not speak.
My name is Nora Sloan. I am thirty-eight years old.
I work as an IT Infrastructure Engineer for the municipal power grid in Phoenix.
An infrastructure engineer knows that people only remember you exist when the internet goes down.
I spend my professional life ensuring that never happens. I maintain server uptime and network security for the entire city.
Two years ago, I designed the redundant failover network that kept our emergency dispatch online during a catastrophic three-day blackout.
While the city went dark, our servers hummed perfectly in the cooled server rooms.
I build the invisible systems that keep other people's lives functioning.
My cousin Derek owned a lucrative local landscaping business. He was thirty-five years old.
Over the last five years, I had built his entire digital presence from scratch.
I set up his custom email routing. I designed the lead-generation forms that drove his seasonal revenue.
I hosted his company website on my personal AWS server.
I did the exact same thing for five other aunts, uncles, and cousins who ran small businesses.
My aunt operated a boutique bakery relying entirely on online orders. My uncle ran a regional plumbing service.
Another cousin managed a freelance photography studio.
I built their digital storefronts. I managed their backend databases. I configured their payment gateways.
Family supports family. That was the unspoken rule I operated under.
I spent over four hundred unpaid hours troubleshooting their technical issues. I gave up my weekends to fix their broken plugins.
When their sites went offline at two in the morning, my phone was the one that rang. I always answered.
I covered all the domain registration fees and hosting costs out of my own pocket. Every invoice came directly to my personal credit card.
$6,500 total over five years.
$1,800 for the dedicated AWS hosting instances.
$1,400 for annual SSL certificate renewals across six different storefronts.
$1,200 for premium domain registrations.
$1,100 for enterprise-grade spam filtering and email routing.
$1,000 for automated cloud backups and security patches.
I never asked them for a single dime.
I managed the complex digital plumbing so they could focus on making money.
They used the profits generated from that digital infrastructure to fund their lives.
Summer arrived in Phoenix. My fourteen-year-old daughter, Maya, was excited about the upcoming family vacation.
She spent Thursday evening quietly unpacking her swimsuit from her duffel bag in her bedroom.
She was trying to hide her tears from me.
She had just checked Instagram. She had realized she was not going to Cabo with her cousins.
The entire extended family had planned and booked a twenty-person resort vacation. They had coordinated flights, hotel blocks, and dinner reservations.
They had not invited us.
I walked out to the driveway to confront Derek. He was the official trip organizer.
That was when he delivered his line about my monitors. That was when he weaponized faux-empathy.
He framed his deliberate exclusion of me and my daughter as a thoughtful accommodation for my stress.
He conveniently ignored that my stress was entirely generated by doing his unpaid IT work.
I walked back inside the house. I went straight to my dark home office.
A calendar alert flashed on my secondary monitor.
It was titled "Sloan Family Domains - Auto-Renew."
I dismissed the notification with a single click of my mouse.
I sat down.
I looked at the ceramic mug resting next to my mechanical keyboard. It had a faded tech conference logo.
It was full of cold coffee from the Saturday morning I spent fixing Derek's email routing.
I picked it up.
My phone buzzed on the glass desk. It was a text message from my aunt.
She was Derek's mother. She actively enabled this dynamic.
"Derek meant well, sweetie," she wrote in the message.
"You do work so hard, you should just enjoy a quiet week at home."
I read the text message twice.
I held the cold ceramic mug in my hand.
I listened to the soft hum of the server rack in the corner of the room.
I set the mug down.
I typed my master admin password into the AWS console.
I picked up my phone.
I dialed Kevin at the domain registrar's Tier 2 Tech Support.
"Initiate bulk transfer," I said.
"Disable all auto-renewals."
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