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#aita #revengestory #redditstories Brother Listed My 6 Rental Homes on Zillow — Then 6 Actual Tenants Called Police for Trespassing @PaybackAlley-f2f The announcement came at Sunday dinner. My brother Marcus stood at the head of the table, iPad in hand, grinning like he'd just solved world hunger. Behind him, my parents beamed with that particular brand of parental pride reserved for the golden child who could do no wrong. "I've taken care of your little problem," Marcus said, turning the screen toward me. Six Zillow listings. Six addresses I knew by heart. My properties. Listed at prices that made my stomach drop—deliberately undervalued to move fast. "Total asking price: $2.1 million. They'll be gone by month's end." My mother clapped her hands together. "Finally. Someone with business sense stepping in." My father nodded, already pulling out his phone calculator. "If we split it six ways—that's $350,000 each. I've been looking at that boat." My sister Emma leaned over Marcus's shoulder. "The commission alone will cover my credit card debt." I sat there, fork suspended over lukewarm mashed potatoes, watching my family divide money they didn't have from properties they didn't own. The dining room suddenly felt small, the walls pressing in with that familiar childhood sensation of being fundamentally misunderstood. "Marcus," I said quietly. "Those properties aren't for sale." He waved dismissively. "Someone has to make the adult decisions here. You've been playing real estate investor for seven years, barely breaking even. It's time to cut losses and move on with your life." The Gambler's Fallacy applies to more than casinos. I'd spent seven years feeding the slot machine of family approval, convinced that the next achievement would finally pay out validation. Property one: "Lucky beginner's luck." Property two: "You'll lose it in the divorce." By property six, they'd stopped pretending to listen when I talked about cap rates and equity accumulation. What they didn't know—what they'd never bothered to ask—was that those six "disasters" generated $11,400 in monthly rental income. After mortgages, taxes, insurance, and maintenance reserves, I cleared $4,200 monthly. Fifty thousand dollars annually in passive income from properties that had appreciated $680,000 in total equity since purchase. #aita #reddit #redditstories #redditstory #revengestory #revenge