£750 and the Secret That Froze Me: The Wife I Called Selfish Was Fighting Alone for Her Dream of Becoming a Mother

When my younger sister Rose called to say she was due to give birth within days, my first reaction was joy followed quickly by panic. Rose, married just over a year, had been struggling financially from the start. Her wedding had been modest, yet she and her husband still owed money to relatives and friends who had helped them pull it off. Neither her husband’s family nor ours had much to spare.

Now, she was about to welcome her first child into the world… without even a proper pram to her name. I could picture her waddling home from the market with second-hand baby clothes in a worn bag, her back aching, her face tired. The image ate at me. I knew I had to help her.

The problem was, I had nothing to give. I’m just an office clerk in Manchester, and my monthly paycheck barely covers rent, bills, and food. Savings? Practically non-existent. But in my mind, there was one obvious source of money: my wife Lisa’s £750 “maternity fund.”

That money wasn’t ours in the usual sense. It had been left to Lisa by her late mother. From the day we married, she told me it was for when we had a child of our own not to be touched for anything else. I’d asked before, in passing, if we could use a little for small emergencies a washing machine repair, a car bill but she always refused.

This time, I told myself, was different. This was my sister. My blood. Surely Lisa would understand.

After dinner that night, I brought it up as casually as I could.

“Lisa… Rose is in a tight spot. I thought maybe we could use your £750 to buy her a decent stroller and some baby supplies. She’s about to give birth and”

“No,” Lisa said instantly, her spoon pausing over her plate. “That money is for us. For our baby.”

I tried to reason with her. “She’s got nothing. Can’t you feel sorry for her? We can save the money back later.”

Her expression didn’t change. “Help her some other way. But not with that.”

And that’s when I lost my patience.

“Why are you being so selfish? She’s my sister! Blood family! It’s just £750, not our life savings.”

Lisa’s eyes met mine, cool and steady.

“You talk about selfishness… but since we got married, have you ever asked me what I need?”

That stung, but pride kept me from backing down. “This isn’t about petty things, Lisa. My sister is also your family. Don’t you see that?”

She didn’t answer. She simply stood, walked into our bedroom, and left me muttering under my breath about her “true colours.”

A few minutes later, she came back carrying a small box. Without a word, she stepped in front of me and let it drop onto the floor.

“You want £750? Here. Take it yourself.”

I looked down. The box had popped open but instead of cash, a stack of medical documents spilled out.

I frowned, picking them up. Fertility test results. Hormone level reports. Ultrasound scans of an abnormal uterus. Dates scattered across the past year GP visits, private clinic appointments, follow-ups.

And then I saw the last page. An In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) cost estimate. Nearly £1,200.

I looked up at her, stunned. Lisa’s eyes were red, but her voice didn’t shake.

“That money… is my only hope to become a mum. I haven’t spent a single pound on myself. I was planning to start IVF next month. And you call me selfish?”

I felt my throat tighten. My mouth went dry. I had nothing to say.

She left the room briefly, then returned with more papers: her resignation letter from her old job, citing health issues and the need for treatment; a letter from her parents apologising for not being able to help financially; and a bank book showing just £800 left most of it that £750 from her mother.

She placed them on the table between us.

“I have no one else but you. I’ve put all my hopes into this. But if I have to give everything away to your family… then maybe I’m not worthy to be your wife.”

With that, she turned and shut the bedroom door behind her, hard.

The house fell utterly silent. I stood there, staring at the medical records scattered on the carpet, hearing only the pounding of my own heart. In that heavy quiet, memories came flooding back: the evenings Lisa went out at odd hours, saying little about where she’d been; the phone calls she’d take in the hallway; the times I’d caught her wiping her eyes, claiming it was “just allergies.” I had never asked.

Her earlier words cut through me again: “Have you ever asked me what I need?”

The truth was brutal: I never had. I had always assumed my priorities helping my family, making sure they were okay should come first, and that Lisa would understand, agree, and sacrifice as needed. But I’d never once stopped to think about her dreams, her struggles, her battles fought in silence.

I sat down, picking up each paper. Every figure, every diagnosis was a slap in the face. Lisa had been fighting alone, carrying this hope quietly, while I’d been ready to strip her of the one chance she had left.

Finally, I went to our bedroom door and knocked. No reply. I pushed it open to find her lying with her back to me, shoulders shaking.

I knelt beside the bed not to beg for money, but for forgiveness.

“Lisa… I’m sorry. I was wrong. I didn’t know. I swear, I didn’t know.”

She didn’t look at me. Her voice was muffled but steady: “You never asked me… I just want to be a mother. That’s all.”

I took her hand, gently squeezing it.

“I promise, from now on, we’re in this together. That money stays where it is. We’ll fight for our dream first no one else’s.”

It didn’t fix everything overnight. Trust takes time to rebuild. But that night, I learned something I’ll never forget: sometimes, the thing a woman guards most fiercely isn’t for her own comfort or indulgence it’s to protect the biggest dream she’s ever had.

And a husband, if he’s too blind to see that, can lose everything.

I nearly lost my wife and our chance to have a child over £750.

Now, whenever I think about that money, I don’t see idle savings. I see hope. I see a symbol of the strength and determination of the woman I married. And I know, beyond any doubt, that the next time I think about “helping” someone, I’ll first ask the person standing beside me: “What do you need?”