Sandra Hayes — Besieged by the People She Loved
Summary
In 2006, Sandra Hayes was a Missouri state social worker and single mother of three from Florissant, near St. Louis, living on less than $26,000 a year when she and a dozen co-workers shared a $224 million Powerball jackpot. Her portion, taken as a lump sum after taxes, came to roughly $6 million. By the financial measures of this catalogue, that should have been the end of the story — a hard-working public servant lifted into security and comfort. Hayes did not gamble it away, did not get robbed or sued into ruin, and did not go broke. She paid off her debt, put the rest into savings, and remained financially stable.
What she lost instead were people. In the book she later wrote, 'How Winning the Lottery Changed My Life: Windfall, a Blessing or a Curse,' and in interviews, Hayes described a relentless siege by relatives and friends who turned predatory once they learned of her money. 'I had to endure the greed and the need that people have, trying to get you to release your money to them,' she said. 'That caused a lot of emotional pain. These are people who you've loved deep down, and they're turning into vampires trying to suck the life out of me.'
Her account is valuable precisely because it is the comparatively happy-ending case. Hayes is proof that a windfall need not destroy a person's finances — she kept her money and managed it carefully. But she is equally proof that the lottery curse is often social rather than financial: the same money that secured her future cost her relationships she had assumed were unconditional, and forced her to defend her boundaries against the very people she had expected to celebrate with.
Hayes did not retire the instant she won; she stayed in her social-services job for about a month afterward. Her measured, deliberate handling of the prize is part of why she survived it. Yet she has been candid that the emotional toll was real and lasting, and her central message to new winners is sober: that they are, as she put it, 'in for the ride of their life,' and that the hardest part is not the money but the people it changes around you.
Timeline
The Win
Sandra Hayes was not the kind of person the word 'jackpot' usually conjures. A social worker for the state of Missouri and a single mother of three from Florissant, near St. Louis, she was living on less than $26,000 a year — a salary that demanded careful budgeting and left little room for luxury. In 2006 she was one of a dozen state co-workers who pooled their money to buy Powerball tickets, the ordinary office ritual that occasionally turns ordinary lives upside down. One of the tickets hit, and the group shared a $224 million jackpot.
Hayes elected, with her share, to take the cash option rather than the long annuity, and after taxes her portion came to roughly $6 million. For someone who had spent her working life helping others while watching her own pennies, it was transformative — enough to retire, pay off her debt, secure her future, and put the rest into savings, lifting her out of the paycheck-to-paycheck existence she had known.
What is notable from the very start is how unflashy her response was. She did not bolt from her job in triumph; by her own account she kept working in social services for about a month after the win. That instinct toward steadiness — toward not letting the money instantly rewrite who she was — would prove to be the quality that carried her through what came next. The financial windfall was secure. The trouble would come from a different direction entirely.
The Spending
There was, in Hayes's case, no spending spree to chronicle — and that is exactly the point. She did not blow the money on cars, casinos, or a mansion; she managed it carefully and held onto it. The 'spending,' in her story, was emotional rather than financial: the relentless expenditure of energy required to fend off the demands that arrived the moment people learned what she had.
The requests came from every direction, and the most painful ones came from inside her own circle. Relatives and longtime friends — people she loved and had counted on — began treating her fortune as a shared resource they were entitled to draw from. The pressure was constant and corrosive. 'I had to endure the greed and the need that people have, trying to get you to release your money to them,' she recalled. 'That caused a lot of emotional pain.'
Her most quoted line captures the betrayal at the heart of it: 'These are people who you've loved deep down, and they're turning into vampires trying to suck the life out of me.' The metaphor is exact — not strangers or con artists, but loved ones transformed by money into something that fed on her. To protect both her finances and her sanity, Hayes had to do the thing few winners are prepared for: say no, set hard boundaries, and in some cases cut people off entirely. The money she kept; the relationships she did not.
The Unraveling
There is no act of ruin in Sandra Hayes's story, and that absence is the whole instruction. She did not lose the money — there were no lawsuits that bled her, no addiction, no theft, no bankruptcy. By the financial logic of the lottery curse, she is a success: a low-income public servant who came into millions and held on to them through discipline and restraint.
The unraveling, such as it was, happened in her relationships. The siege of requests and the greed she encountered among people she loved left a lasting mark, and her solution — refusing demands, drawing boundaries, distancing herself from those who had become predatory — meant that her social world contracted even as her bank balance grew. She has described having to guard her money and her peace against the very people she might once have leaned on. The cost of keeping the fortune was paid in trust and intimacy.
That is why Hayes belongs in this catalogue alongside the bankrupts and the bereaved, despite her solvency. Her case isolates a variable the dramatic ruin stories blur together: even when a winner does everything financially right, sudden wealth can still corrode the human relationships around it. The curse, in her telling, is not a thing that happens to your money. It is a thing that happens to the people, and to how they see you.
What Went Wrong
After
Sandra Hayes turned her experience into a warning for others. Her book, 'How Winning the Lottery Changed My Life: Windfall, a Blessing or a Curse,' and the interviews she has given over the years frame her win not as a triumph or a tragedy but as a complicated trade — security purchased at the price of relationships and peace of mind. She did not retire into seclusion the moment she won; she kept her social-services job for about a month, a small detail that signals the steadiness that defined her handling of the prize.
Her advice to new winners is unromantic. They are, she has said, 'in for the ride of their life' — and she means the warning as much as the wonder. The lesson she presses is that the money is the easy part; the hard part is the people, and the way a windfall reveals who in your life sees you and who sees your balance. She counsels caution, boundaries, and a clear-eyed expectation that some loved ones will not behave the way you hoped.
In Cursed Jackpot, Hayes is the deliberate counterpoint to the ruin stories. She kept her fortune and her solvency, which sets her apart from nearly every other entry here. But she is included because she documents the curse's other, quieter form: the relational toll that lands even on the careful winner. Her story is the proof that 'cursed' does not always mean broke — sometimes it means keeping the money and losing the people.
Lessons
- A windfall can leave your finances intact and still cost you the relationships you assumed were unconditional.
- The most painful pressure for money often comes not from strangers but from the loved ones who feel entitled to it.
- Saying no and setting boundaries is exhausting emotional labour that few winners are prepared for.
- Doing everything right with the money is no protection against the social toll sudden wealth imposes.
- The lottery 'curse' is frequently relational rather than financial — sometimes you keep the money and lose the people.