usa-goat.com
  • Stories
  • Funny jokes
  • Healthy
  • Blog
  • More
    • Blog
    • Contact
    • Search Page
Notification
usa-goat.comusa-goat.com
Font ResizerAa
  • HomeHome
  • My Feed
  • My Interests
  • My Saves
  • History
Search
  • Quick Access
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Blog Index
    • History
    • My Saves
    • My Interests
    • My Feed
  • Categories
    • Funny jokes
    • Blog
    • Stories
    • Healthy

Top Stories

Explore the latest updated news!

I Thought Biker Was Going To Kidnap Me When He Pulled Over Next To My Broken Down Limo

9.9k 51

My Son Let His Wife Push Me Off a Bridge for $80 Million — But the 74-Year-Old “Dead Man” Came Home With a Secret in His Pocket-q

8.6k 58

My Family Chose To Ignore My Graduation On Purpose. That Same Week, I Quietly Changed My Name And Walked Away From That House For Good. I Thought I Was Just Trying To Protect Myself — But That One Decision Ended Up Changing Everything.

4.8k 63

Stay Connected

Find us on socials
248.1kFollowersLike
61.1kFollowersFollow
165kSubscribersSubscribe
Made by viralstoryteller.com
Stories

My Boyfriend Was Saving For A Home—But I Was Hiding Something Bigger Than Money

7.4k 42
Share
SHARE

I didn’t tell him about my savings. Not that night. Not even the next.

Instead, I went to visit his cousin the following weekend. He was throwing a birthday party for his girlfriend at a rooftop bar downtown. I kid you not.

There were sparklers in the champagne bottles and a rented photo booth with a neon sign that said “Living My Best Life.”

I didn’t even need to ask. I watched him laugh with his friends, pull out a gold chain for the birthday gift, and book a limo for the after-party. That’s where Naveen’s money went.

And my stomach turned. I didn’t confront him that night. I didn’t want a scene.

But I took a photo of the champagne tower and sent it to Naveen the next day. No caption. Just the photo.

He called immediately. I could hear his breath catching through the phone. He didn’t cry.

Naveen never cries. But he got quiet in that way that makes me cry. “I messed up,” he whispered.

“I didn’t think he’d do that to me.”

That was the first time I almost told him. But then another thought hit me—what if I just fixed it? What if I took the blow he didn’t see coming and turned it into something good?

So I started looking into properties. Not one-bedrooms on the outskirts. Not half-finished basements.

But small townhouses—within reach together, if I added my stash. I looped in my cousin, Saira, a real estate agent in Mississauga. She kept it discreet.

By the end of the month, we had a viewing booked. Three-bed, 2-bath, small garden, quiet street. Asking $445k.

We could just make it with both our savings. Still, I told him it was just a weekend getaway. A friend’s listing.

He didn’t suspect a thing. Just nodded, tired as ever, and said he could use some air. That Saturday morning, I drove us out.

He didn’t ask questions, just leaned back in the passenger seat and hummed along to the old Bollywood playlist we always play on road trips. When we pulled up to the house, his eyebrows knit. “This doesn’t look like a vacation rental,” he said.

“It’s not,” I replied. He looked at me, confused. I pulled the keys out of my pocket and handed them to him.

He just stared. “I’ve been saving too,” I said. “Let’s go look inside.”

He walked through the door in stunned silence.

Touched the wall like it was a dream. Looked out the back window to the garden with the tiny maple tree. “I don’t understand,” he finally said.

“How did you—”

“I just wanted us to have something solid. Something ours,” I said. And then I told him everything.

The tutoring. The crafts. The food page.

The late nights and savings account. The silent matching game I’d been playing. His eyes welled up.

He looked at me like I’d just rewired his entire world. “You didn’t have to do all that,” he whispered. “I wanted to,” I said.

“But what about your dreams?” he asked. “You always said you wanted to open your own place, a café or bakery or something.”

“I still do,” I said. “But I realized I didn’t want it before us.

I wanted it with us.”

We sat on the floor of that empty living room for hours. No furniture. No electricity.

Just light pouring in through the windows and two people realizing they’d both been fighting the same battle—just from different flanks. We closed on the house two weeks later. Now, here’s the twist.

A few days after we moved in, Naveen got a call. From his cousin. Apparently, someone had told the rest of the family about the rooftop party.

The gold chain. The champagne tower. Word got around.

And his parents? Furious. Long story short: they forced him to sell the car, return the chain, and pay Naveen back in full—plus interest.

Naveen didn’t even want to accept it at first. But I told him: sometimes karma isn’t cruel. Sometimes it just shows up late.

We used that money to furnish the house and invest a little in my dream—starting a pop-up stall at the Sunday market. I called it “Daal & Dough,” a mix of baked goods and Indian comfort food. It’s been five months now.

We still do Tuesday night biryani, but now it’s in our own kitchen. Naveen has scaled back to just one job—one he likes. And I work full-time on my little business, which has started gaining local traction.

Some days I still catch him staring at the garden like he can’t believe it’s real. I know how he feels. The lesson?

Love isn’t just candlelit dinners or poetic promises. Sometimes it’s silent hustle. The kind that happens behind the scenes.

The kind where you’re both sweating in different corners, not knowing you’re building the same dream. And sometimes, the quietest people do the loudest saving. If this story moved you even a little, share it.

Someone out there might need a reminder that love is action. Like & comment if you believe in building together. ❤️

Previous12
Stories

I Thought Biker Was Going To Kidnap Me When He Pulled Over Next To My Broken Down Limo

9.9k 51
Stories

My Son Let His Wife Push Me Off a Bridge for $80 Million — But the 74-Year-Old “Dead Man” Came Home With a Secret in His Pocket-q

8.6k 58
Stories

My Family Chose To Ignore My Graduation On Purpose. That Same Week, I Quietly Changed My Name And Walked Away From That House For Good. I Thought I Was Just Trying To Protect Myself — But That One Decision Ended Up Changing Everything.

4.8k 63
Stories

My Boyfriend Told Me I’m ‘Selfish’ For Not Wanting Him To Sleep Over At His Female..-H

3.7k 18

usa-goat.com is the blog where emotions meet laughter! Discover touching stories that stay with you and jokes that will have you laughing to tears. Every post is handpicked to entertain, move, and brighten your day.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conidition
  • Adverts
  • Our Jobs
  • Term of Use

Made by usa-goat.com

adbanner
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?