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My Entitled Sister’s Kids Broke My $2,200 Work iPad, but She Just Laughed — So I Taught Her a Lesson in Responsibility

My name is Rachel, and I’ve always been the responsible one in my family. I’m not saying that with pride—just as a fact. I plan ahead. I follow through. I pay my bills on time and say sorry when I’m wrong. My older sister, Claire, is… let’s say, the opposite.

Claire is impulsive and carefree, with two kids she treats more like friends than children. She calls it “gentle parenting.” I call it letting them run wild while she scrolls on her phone or sips her latte. But I’ve always kept my mouth shut—family, after all.

Until last month

It all started with a simple visit.

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Claire asked if she could bring the kids over for the afternoon. “Just for a few hours,” she said. “They miss you, and I need a breather.”

I hesitated. I work from home as a freelance designer. My deadlines are brutal, and my clients are even worse. My tools—especially my iPad Pro—are like sacred instruments to me. It’s not just a tablet. It’s my studio, my sketchpad, my income. It cost me $2,200, and I treat it like gold.

Still, I agreed. I cleared a corner of my workspace and put the iPad in its padded case, zipped inside a drawer, just in case. I even bought snacks and set up a movie to keep the kids busy. I figured two or three hours wouldn’t kill me.

Oh, how wrong I was.

Claire arrived late, as usual, pushing through the door with six-year-old Maddie and four-year-old Jacob tearing through the hallway like wind-up toys. She barely greeted me before flopping onto my couch, already texting someone. The kids screamed and jumped and threw their shoes across the room.

“I thought you said you’d bring a game or something for them?” I asked gently.

“They’ll find something to do,” she mumbled, eyes on her screen.

I should’ve known.

I retreated to my office, headphones on, trying to finish a logo revision due that evening. It wasn’t until I heard a loud crack followed by shrieking laughter that I bolted from my chair.

My heart sank.

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There, in the middle of my living room, were Maddie and Jacob—covered in marker ink, standing over my shattered iPad. The drawer was open. The case lay discarded. The screen was spider-webbed, the Apple Pencil snapped in half.

My vision blurred.

“What happened?!” I gasped.

Maddie shrugged. “We were drawing like on TV. The pen is fun!”

Jacob added, “It makes a cool crashing sound when you throw it!”

Claire strolled over, glanced at the broken screen, and laughed. Laughed.

“Oh my god, Rachel. Chill. It’s just a screen. Don’t be so dramatic.”

I stared at her. “Claire. That iPad was two thousand two hundred dollars. That’s my work. My income.”

She rolled her eyes. “You’re so uptight. Just get another one. You’re always working, you must have money.”

“I bought it after months of saving! And they went through my stuff!”

Claire shrugged. “Well, maybe don’t leave it where kids can get it.”

That was the final straw.

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For the next few days, I was livid. Claire never apologized. She didn’t offer to pay. Not a word. I had to scramble, borrow an old tablet from a friend, and explain delays to my client. I ended up losing that contract.

But something shifted in me.

I realized that Claire never had to face consequences because people like me always cleaned up after her. I was tired of enabling her irresponsibility. I needed to do something—not out of spite, but to teach her what real responsibility looked like.

So I came up with a plan.

Two weeks later, I invited Claire and the kids to dinner. “No hard feelings,” I told her. “I figured we could catch up. Just a casual evening.”

She accepted, no hesitation.

That afternoon, I transformed my living room into an art studio—paint, paper, glitter, markers, all over the place. I set out snacks and told the kids, “Go crazy! Paint whatever you want!” Their eyes lit up.

While Claire relaxed with a glass of wine, I gave them permission to create “a masterpiece.” And they did. On paper. On the floor. On their clothes. On the walls. I said nothing. Just smiled.

Then, while they were busy, I asked Claire to help me bring in some things from the car. Outside, I casually said, “Hey, by the way, do you know how much your new bag cost?”

She looked confused. “My Marc Jacobs? About $300. Why?”

I smiled sweetly. “Just checking.”

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We came back in and I pretended to trip. My glass of cranberry juice splashed across the floor—right onto her handbag, which the kids had been “decorating” with glitter pens

Claire screamed. “Rachel! Are you kidding me?! That’s designer!”

I widened my eyes. “Oh no! It was just sitting there on the floor. You should’ve put it somewhere safe, Claire.”

She gaped at me. “You need to pay for that!”

I folded my arms. “Oh, I’m sorry. I thought we didn’t pay for things our kids ruined?”

Her face turned red. “That’s different!”

I looked her in the eye. “Is it? Because you laughed when they broke my iPad. That cost seven times what your bag did.”

She was silent.

“I didn’t do this to be cruel,” I added. “But you need to understand that actions have consequences. That kids need boundaries. That laughing at someone else’s loss isn’t okay.”

Claire fumed, grabbed her bag, and left in a storm.

I honestly expected a cold war to follow. And for a few days, that’s what happened. No texts. No calls.

Then something surprising happened.

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A week later, a delivery truck pulled into my driveway. Inside was a brand new iPad Pro, Apple Pencil included. No note, but I knew who sent it.

Later that evening, Claire called.

“I get it now,” she said. “I really do. I’m sorry. I was so used to people letting things slide. I didn’t realize how much that hurts until I felt it myself.”

I stayed quiet.

“The kids… they’re good kids, but I haven’t been doing right by them. I’m going to start setting rules. And I’m paying for their messes from now on. Including this iPad. I owe you.”

It wasn’t just words. Over the next few months, Claire changed.

She enrolled Maddie and Jacob in art classes. Started implementing routines. Discipline. Apologies. She even hired a babysitter when she needed a break, instead of pushing them onto me.

We became closer—not because I let things slide, but because I finally stood up and said enough.

Sometimes, the people we love the most need boundaries the most. Not out of anger, but out of love. Claire isn’t perfect now—but she’s trying. And that matters.

As for me? I still keep my iPad locked up.

But I also keep an open heart.

Because the lesson wasn’t just for Claire. It was for me, too.

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