LOL. For five pages, people have been telling you that THEY DO NOT WANT YOUR MONEY AND THE OPINION THAT COMES ATTACHED TO IT. When is that going to sink in? |
You are horrible! They are living their life the way they want with their money and on their schedule. 'kay? |
Yes, the part that I bolded is exactly why they have refused your offer. You are incorrect that your generosity was denied. If it was generous, the loan or gift would have been given freely without expectation of them kowtowing to your controlling ways. In this case, you did not offer a loan, you offered strings with emotional guilt. You make the offer to loan them money and then hold that over their heads expecting them to do what you want as opposed to what they want. You've had your change to buy your own home and make your own decisions, it's their turn now. If you cannot freely offer them money without strings attached like you've shown in this posting, then you should keep your money and your guilt trip to yourself. That is the way to be a more respectful in-law.
I'm truly sorry that you don't see how anti-social you are. I give my parents and my mother-in-law the respect that they deserve. I bought a house that included a first floor in-law suite so that they have a place to stay when they visit that does not require steps since my father and mother-in-law cannot handle steps any longer. I allow them to visit and stay with us and visit the grandkids pretty much at their whim. I shop for and feed them, provide them a spare car to get around and care for them. I do not allow them to make decisions about my life, my house, my property and my choices. What you've done is taken advantage of your son in the past. You gave him a loan for his graduate school and then you've impinged on his freedom to choose for himself. You've used your loan to him as a form of extortion and now you've made the same type of offer again and he has chosen to decline. As is typical with emotional abusers, rather than see yourself and your choices as t he cause for this disruption in your relationship, you look for external blame and you pin your blame on your daughter-in-law when more likely the cause is that you've overstepped your son's boundaries and he's trying to reestablish them more firmly. I hope that you can wake up and see what harm you're causing your relationship with your son before it becomes too late. If you want to have a chance to see any grandchildren from this couple, I would suggest you do a little introspection and try to figure out how to let go of the apron strings that your son has already cut. If you keep trying to yank those apron strings, they'll probably cut you off more than just declining your not-so-generous offers. |
Super generous LOAN! Only minimal interest and they have to choose the carpet and paint you like! I'd rather be broke. |
This has got to be a troll (and a bad one at that). There is no way that someone could be this much of a bitch and be clueless about it. |
There is no way in hell I would take a LOAN from a family member unless I was in seriously dire straits. Mixing business with family is a recipe for disaster. Sounds like your son is very wise. |
Offer them a gift not a loan |
OP: It sounds like the main consideration is getting as far away from you as possible and they are willing to sacrifice on the esthetics to do so. |
I wouldn't take the gift. Strings. |