Do My Favorite Niece and Favorite Nephew Deserve Lottery Tickets?

By:

The Dude on the Right

On my

MySpace page blog
I listed a few of my goals for the New Year.  Along
with a Chicago Bear’s Super Bowl win was my winning the
Mega Millions jackpot
when it was over $100 Million.  But now that the jackpot is over $100
Million, I have created a new dilemma for myself, especially with my big win
with yesterday’s jackpot, a $10 win that gives me the cash for buying new
tickets for Tuesday’s drawing.

You might ask, "What kind of dilemma is there
when buying lotto tickets?" but because I’m nuts, well, here goes.

Many, many
years ago, when I finally had some of my own income and would buy a few lotto
tickets when the jackpot got into that "What the hell would I do with fifty
million dollars?" range, rather than, in my head, bask in the glory of being
able to imagine the great new house, a cool car, not working for the man, well,
my thoughts turned to my family.  Not so much mom and dad, other than
figuring I would have to pay to get their phone number changed and maybe buy
them some cool stuff, but rather the thoughts turned to my brother and sister. 
If they were in a financial bind would they come to me for help?  Hell, if
they weren’t in a financial bind, would they come to me expecting a hand-out? 
And even if I gave them something, what would stop them from coming back to me
later, looking for more?

And so I developed a "buying lottery ticket’s" plan.

If the jackpot was small I would buy a quick-pick ticket or two.  If I won
– great!  But if the jackpot was larger I would buy five tickets, all with
the same numbers, based on my family.  My thinking was this:  I buy
five tickets, all with the same numbers, and they come in.  I give my
brother one ticket in exchange for a dollar and I give my sister one ticket in
exchange for a dollar.  I keep the other three tickets, with the agreement
between us being that I will take care of any need’s mom and dad might have
(since I have the other two tickets), and if any of us are fiscally
irresponsible with our winnings, in the future, well, we can’t go to any sibling
looking for a hand-out.  We would all be on our own with what where my
winnings and now part of those are theirs.  So say the jackpot was $100
million and my five tickets were the only winners?  That leaves my brother
and sister with $20 million each, and me with a nice $60 million dollars. 
(On a side note, imagine if there were six winning tickets, and I have five of
them – that other person first finds out that they won and thinks they have $100
million, then they find out that there are six winning tickets and they are
still happy because they at least won over $16 million bucks, then they find out
that I have $83ish million dollars worth of tickets to their $16ish million. 
Would they be mad at me?  I’m sorry I digressed.  Back to dilemma-ing.)

But this morning I came up with my new, "buying lotto ticket’s" dilemma.

I
have a favorite nephew, and I have a favorite niece.  In fact, right now,
they are my only nephew and my only niece.  And I wondered, in the shower
this morning, if I should now include them in my lotto ticket buy?  My
nephew is in college, so he is supposed to be an adult, and my niece will be 16
in a few weeks, making her an adult in at least a country or two in the world. 
Does this now mean they deserve their own tickets?  And really, can I trust
my sister to make sure they are taken care of, or would my fear of them coming
to Uncle Dude, looking for money in the future, become a new reality?

But then
the financial reality of including them in my ticket buy came in.

Let’s see: 
Instead of five tickets I buy seven.  The jackpot is still $100 million
bucks and I have the only winning tickets.  Instead of being worth $20
million each, now each ticket is worth about $14.3 million.  That means my
brother, sister, niece, and nephew find themselves with $14.3 million apiece,
not a bad chunk of change for them thanks to my good fortune.  Meanwhile my
jackpot diminished from $60 million bucks to take care of myself, my mom, and my
dad, to a paltry $42.9 million.

So I have to decide if my favorite niece and
favorite nephew are worth a little over $17 million bucks to me, or should I
count on their mother to make sure they are taken care with her winnings?

Then
it occurred to me that instead of five tickets with the same numbers, well, I
could up that to ten.  With that same $100 million jackpot each ticket
would be worth $10 million.  I’d give one ticket to my brother, one to my
sister, one to my favorite niece, and one to my favorite nephew, leaving me with
six tickets, and I’m back at $60 million buckaroos!  Now my brother and
sister are pissed because their winnings went from $20 million to $10 million
(and especially my brother since my niece and nephew aren’t his kids), my niece
and nephew are pissed because if I weren’t so greedy about the $60 million
they’d each have another $4.3 million, and if there happened to be another
person with a winning ticket, that poor bastard goes from winning $100 million
to less than $10 million, all because I wanted to stake my claim at that $60
million dollar mark.

See, I told you I was nuts!

I’ve got a $10 winning Mega
Millions ticket and now I don’t know how to spend it.  I could buy ten Mega
Millions tickets all with the same numbers with the potential to piss off a lot
of people; I could buy seven Mega Millions tickets all with the same number and
maybe lose $17 million bucks for me; I could stick with my "buying five tickets"
plan and hope my sister takes care of her kids; Or I could, oh hell, maybe I
should just buy two "Quarter Pounder With Cheese Meals" and be happy for an
hour, until I realize that it  means I will probably also lose a bet with
my sister.

You see, I’m nuts, and also with dilemmas!

That’s it for this one!  I’m The Dude on the Right!!  L8R!!!