16/05/2026
FINANCIAL ASSISTANT SURVEY: Les payés mal
I asked 100 people for help.
50 family, 50 friends. Some abroad, some right here at home.
I thought blood and closeness would make a difference. It didn’t.
30% gave me promises. “I’ll see what I can do.” “I’ll send it this week.”
20% tried, with small tokens. Not enough to solve it, but enough to show they cared.
The rest? Silence. Excuses. Avoidance.
The 30% with promises taught me the promise trap. Words felt sincere, but days turned to weeks and nothing came. I learned that a promise without action is just a way to keep someone’s conscience quiet. From then on, I stopped building my plans on “I’ll see.” If it wasn’t in my hand, it wasn’t real.
The 20% who gave small help taught me something else. It wasn’t much, sometimes it felt too small to matter. But those small tokens stayed with me longer than the big promises. Because they were real. If you’re on the receiving end, be grateful for the small help. If you’re giving, don’t underestimate what 5,000 can do for someone drowning.
The hardest part was watching hidden characters come out. Friends I thought were close went silent. Family abroad acted like they didn’t know me. And some people I didn’t expect showed up. Money didn’t create these reactions. It revealed them. When you ask for help, you’re not changing people. You’re removing their mask.
After months of waiting, something shifted in me. I realized I was spending more energy tracking who said what than actually solving my problem. The rejections forced me to look inward. If no one was going to pull me out, I had to learn to swim myself. That day I stopped depending on others and started depending on me.
Here’s what the survey taught me:
1. People’s reaction to money requests tells you who they are, not who you are.
2. Promises are cheap. Actions are rare.
3. Small help is still help. Respect it.
4. Expectation is a trap. Lower it, keep the love.
5. Rejection can redirect you.
6. Self-reliance is the best insurance.
7. Now I know who matters.
I called it _Les payés mal_ because that’s how I felt. Not just in money, but in effort, in loyalty, in expectation.
But the title isn’t about being a victim. It’s about realizing you can’t afford to stay poorly paid in mindset, in action, or in independence.
If you’re reading this because you’re in that same place — asking, waiting, hoping — hear me:
Ask if you must. But don’t stop there.
Use every “no” as fuel. Build yourself so that one day, you’re the one giving without needing to be asked.
The End.