Hahaha! This is how a-hole parents rationalize this toxic garbage. We didn't pay because you needed to bootstrap your way through life. These same toxic parents will then show up for milestones and boast that their ace parenting is why the kid is successful, when really, any success is in spite of their toxic parenting. |
I'm witness to similar happening right now and there is not more to it. The eldest siblings got shafted and were forced to stay local or go to junior college, while the baby of the family got to go wherever she wanted. The parents even bragged for months on end about touring colleges across the East Coast for her. They never toured a single college for the older kids. |
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MIL tried to do this with my husband and his brother. They graduated from high school two years apart. My husband called her on it and she did finish paying his college bills but then gifted over 100k to his brother to buy a house. Favoritism is a family tradition in his family. Parents tend to pick the favored adult child and put all of their effort, time and financial, into that adult child only.
Husband stays in touch with them bimonthly by phone. That’s it. We visit them every other year and expect nothing, not even a shared meal, from them. They don’t have an interest in our children either. They sent a small monetary gift to our son who just graduated from high school. He said thanks but that’s the most they have ever done for him. MIL barely even speaks to our kids when we have visited. She prefers BIL’s kids. |
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This happened in my family fairly recently.
My parent made a grand proclamation that “all grandchildren’s college tuitions will be paid for so don’t worry I’m paying!” There are 9 grandchildren! Amazing! My DC happens to be the oldest and chose community college for 2 years, then transferred, achieved degree. My parent paid for it all. Awesome. Next grandchild went out of state to a very expensive private university. Grandparent paid for travel, books and campus meal plan. Ok, nice. That’s generous but maybe not equivalent to my DC. The next 3 years, grandparent dialed back to just “helping with books and if you need some extra money, just ask” and some very modest cash presents - $100 here and there. My youngest started college and grandparent pulled the plug; sorry, moving into a continuing care community and need all extra savings. My parent died suddenly a few years later and we ended up inheriting money to put the rest through college. |
| My husband comes from a family of 5. Oldest 4 had to take out student loans (a couple of them are still paying these enormous loans), then youngest, who is significantlly younger, didn't have to take out loans because family had more $$. Nobody seems weird or bitter about this. It just is the situation. |
They better hope BIL's family is interested in elder care because life comes at you fast when you BIL doesn't care and the black sheep gets to decide what home to put you in |
Really? If you can afford to pay for the youngest, then you can afford to help the older kids with loans |
It’s like you’re at my family thanksgiving table! The truth is - I am proud at how I made my own way independently and gained a lot of self sufficiency from it. But yeah, zero relationship with my parents now. I feel zero guilt about letting the younger sibs carry the entire load of elder care. And some of the younger sibs haven’t done all that well in life either so I don’t resent them. |
I know this is a zombie thread, but +100. My parents will likely leave debts not assets to their estate but when I learned my father had taken me out of the will (for no discernible recent conflict) I was DONE. |
| My parents paid for my two siblings to go to the colleges of their choice, one an Ivy. I had to attend the one I got a full scholarship to and never visited until I started there. I had a good experience but I still hold some resentment that I’ve only shared with my husband. |
+3. My parents sent me to truly awful public schools which I would tell them were awful while I was a student. Fast forward a couple years and my two youngest siblings were sent to private. Now in retrospect decades later, any conversation about my awful k-12 school and they will gaslight me that my schools were just fine and I’m exaggerating how bad they were. Wtf. They were literally so bad you sent my younger siblings to private! |
| My parents did something similar: made the older two take out loans to pay for part of our educations so we "learn the value of an education" but didn't make the youngest take out any loans. And before anyone says my parents had a point with the first two kids--I received a full tuition merit scholarship to a good university. All three kids had about the same educational costs. My room and board expenses were essentially the same cost as the in-state tuition and room and board for both my siblings. I worked hard in HS and undergrad to maintain a great GPA (and keep my scholarship). I did not need to "learn the value of an education." That was simply posturing bc they probably couldn't afford it. Youngest never really tried in school that much. And magically when the older two were out of the house and they only had one kid to pay for, (surprise surprise!) "why would we make him take out loans when we can afford it?". Parents never tried to justify the difference. And it was their $ to spend how they want. But it was unfair. The third kid has never had a career and has been unemployed for 4 years. |
| This happened to my husband and his sister (the two oldest.) Had to pay for college but the younger 2 had college paid for them. My SIL is definitely resentful and the youngest still mooches off my ILs (in spite of owning multiple rentals and being well-off.) It's ridiculous. The other siblings will likely notice and hold a grudge. |
The finances have changed, as they have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on 2 tuitions and May have nothing left. You think you know but you don’t. |
Huh? How dumb! |