My mother passed away 2 years ago. I took care of her for 5 years after my father passed. She bought the house next door to me. She had COPD, never drove and relied on me for most everything. My one sisters son's never even saw the inside of my moms new house. My sister passed away this past November. They are now splitting my sisters share of a nice size inheritance. I don't want their money, but am having trouble with thinking they don't deserve it either. Am I wrong for feeling this way?
Well - no, not *wrong.* You feel how you feel. You are entitled to your opinion.
But I think you will feel better if you enlarge your view, and remember that inheritance is not just about what people deserve, in a simple do the work reap the rewards way.
Focus on the boys' right to receive their legacy; and hope that they in time they will reflect on what that money really means in terms of duty to one's family, as demonstrated by their grandmother.
There's also that parable about the men turning up early, later on and very late at the vineyard, and they all get the same wages. I have to say that as a child I totally sympathised with the harder workers and thought it was a rubbish parable; but I now (if grudgingly) accept that the moral is that you receive according to how much you are loved - i.e. by God, infinitely - rather than by how much you deserve. Well humph!
Your mother loved all her family. And she didn't love you any the less because of it.
But he caused mom plenty of problems and was self centered. I. helped her.
I think it's normal feelings.
Decades ago, parents use to give the sons much more of the estate then the daughters. The thought behind that was that the daughters had husbands to support them.
Thus when there are grown children mentioned in a Will, there is usually a phase that the Attorneys will use stating if a grown children pre-decease the parent, then the estate will be divided equality among the remaining children.... or it could say that the children of the pre-deceased grown child would get that grown child's share.
Some use wills as a way to control, reward and punish. Others think an even split is the way to go, regardless of who visits, does caregiving and/or does other work for the person that passed. Many use it as a final word or a final smack down. Others bequeath the standard splits, giving it little thought.
I think the key to surviving a will is to accept it is what it is - people can choose who and how they want their estate distributed - and that receiving anything at all is more than you had. Just try not to dwell on it or over think it.
I say this as I'm currently executor of my mothers estate - again being the person doing all the work - as I have the past six years for my parent... yet getting the exact same amount as my brother who lives locally and only saw our mom twice a year and NEVER called.
It is what it is and stewing or being bitter about it doesn't change a thing - and only serves to make me unhappy while my brother counts his cash.
He had a will leaving everything to his nieces and nephews and the daughter. I have no idea what was in his mind when he wrote the will but he had a scale based on eldest to youngest. The eldest nieces and nephews getting something like 20% each down to 5% each for the youngest of 13.
Eventually, all nieces and nephews were grown up and successful so he re-wrote his will. He disinherited the daughter and left everything in equal shares to his grand nieces and nephews.
He died with that will unsigned and literally sitting on the kitchen table.
So, in the end, I inherited about $13K whereas under the new will, my son would have come into $75K.
I didn't deserve anything any more or less than my cousins. Uncle Ted was in good health and lived independently until the day he fell over and died. Yeah, I wondered what his reasoning was behind the split and I had my "oh man" moment when I realized that we were one little signature away from college not being a concern. But I tell the story as a cautionary tale. If you want your assets dispersed a certain way, don't procrastinate changing your will.
Hubby and I have been meaning to change our wills for five years now - guess we better get on it!
My mothers will named her three children and if any of us three preceded mom - the money was to go to that child's child/children. From there - if the specific grandchildren/child was also deceased it stopped there - not going on to moms great grandkids - the share went back into the kitty for the original surviving children to split.
Very wise, and very true. And sometimes there are even undercurrents that go back to a previous generation that we are not privy to.
Well, one of my Mom's sisters got into a snit once she learned she got less than her other sisters. The reason was that she played the horses too much and kept losing money. Snitty sister sued the estate.... then when she didn't like the Attorney she was using, she found a new one which put the estate back into square one.... this went on for 10 years.....
Thus in those 10 long years trying to distribute the estate, the estate had to pay mega taxes on my grandparents house and the milking business, plus all the other required taxes that businesses incur. Then all the attorney fees piled one on top of another for those 10 years. That wiped out a good chunk of the estate that my grandparents [who were immigrants] had built up over 60 years through a lot of hard work.
Just think, an extra few thousands in that savings bank book would have avoided paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes/expenses/attorney fees.
Your *feelings are NOT wrong. I would feel the exact same way and probably be angry. But your thinking is wrong. And wrong thinking is hurting you. Bear this in mind. Your nephews weren't given a dime from your mother's estate (rightfully so). Your sister was given an inheritance (which makes sense). You knew that at some point if your sister died, whatever *she had would be left to her sons, and that's what happened. So you lost nothing and no wrong was committed here. Reminding yourself of that will give you emotional relief.
But no, in feeling that way, you are ABSOLUTELY NOT WRONG. But continuing to feel that way, you are hurting yourself.
There's nothing you can do to change the way things are, but you can stop it from making you miserable. That's the only option available to you, to not let this make you miserable.
Our aging parents cannot see the future. And often they cannot (or will not?) see the present. It's maddening.
Frequently there is an heir or heirs who get the same (or more) as the heir(s) who sacrifice the most for that elder. It makes no sense. But we only hurt ourselves with anger and resentment.
Just another chapter in our elders' impaired reasoning (dementia or not). And stubbornness. And refusal to acknowledge the pint of view of those who are looking out for them.
Learning the hard way myself....how much grace I lack. Dollars & cents or not, the perceptions of others can be frustrating. After you've been on the front line of elder care, it's hard to acknowledge the "blessings" that the bystanders spout off about. Up close, the journey is too surreal.
Be kind to yourself.