Anonymous wrote:"It may upset you to think about Mom, but unless you set it up as a trust, neither of us have any way of knowing what Step-Dad will do 5, 10 or 20 years after you are gone. If you are ok with me getting nothing, that's your choice. If you'd like me to get *something* then you need to explore setting up a trust."
Say it once, then drop it.
Anonymous wrote:Do you know how much there is? If she has say $100,000 I would let it go. Elder care is expensive and you have the peace of mind there is someone who loves her looking out for her. If he inherits some of that, then let him enjoy it. If we are talking millions of dollars, I would bring it up and ask about what advice she got. He should inherit some money if he manages her care and caregivers are very expensive as are residential programs.
In the end all you can do is gently bring it up and then if she stays in denial have your own boundaries. I would not start a fight. I would focus on accepting reality and enjoying the time you have with her, while also not using all your leave or risking your job to support her for medical emergencies. Let him be there and you help as much as you feel good about it without resentment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom died when I was 30. My Dad remarried 5 years later and everything went to his wife and her children, who were in their 40s when their mom married my dad.
They were married 10 years.
Yeah not bitter.
This happened to my friend. Her mom died when she was in college. Dad remarried when she was around 30, when she also got married and had kids. When the dad died, he left everything to the new wife. Wife had a daughter so it is unlikely my friend or her siblings will ever get anything. It will all go to the stepdaughter eventually.
I don’t understand how these people think. Shouldn’t their own bio kids come first???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Dad has been a workaholic my entire life. He is on his third wife (second one died, first was my mom), third wife has one son. My dad's second wife had a son, not his bio kid. My dad's grand plan is that his estate will be divided into quarters for all four kids (I have a bio sister). Stepmom is executor of the will. You following all this?
Nothing is in a trust. My Dad's current wife has had her son on the family dole since college. Paid for his grad school, the engagement ring for his girlfriend, will pay for their wedding and first house. My sister and I were not parented this way, nor did we expect it. I explained to my dad that as the executor of his will, stepmom can, and likely will, do whatever she wants with his estate. My assumption is that she'll leave it to her son.
Dad will hear none of it. He is convinced that they "feel the same!" about all the kids, which my sister and I objectively know is not true, and that's that. There is no further discussion about it.
This is what my dad needs to believe, that current wife shares his values. She's happy to let him think that. The kicker: she had him move their estate planning from his former financial advisor to an attorney she knew, who happened to be her son's godfather.
I get it OP.
While I agree she should not be the executor given the conflicting interests, it’s not accurate that she can do whatever she wants. Not legally. She has to follow the terms of the will. You can sue if not.
Anonymous wrote:My mom died when I was 30. My Dad remarried 5 years later and everything went to his wife and her children, who were in their 40s when their mom married my dad.
They were married 10 years.
Yeah not bitter.
Anonymous wrote:My Dad has been a workaholic my entire life. He is on his third wife (second one died, first was my mom), third wife has one son. My dad's second wife had a son, not his bio kid. My dad's grand plan is that his estate will be divided into quarters for all four kids (I have a bio sister). Stepmom is executor of the will. You following all this?
Nothing is in a trust. My Dad's current wife has had her son on the family dole since college. Paid for his grad school, the engagement ring for his girlfriend, will pay for their wedding and first house. My sister and I were not parented this way, nor did we expect it. I explained to my dad that as the executor of his will, stepmom can, and likely will, do whatever she wants with his estate. My assumption is that she'll leave it to her son.
Dad will hear none of it. He is convinced that they "feel the same!" about all the kids, which my sister and I objectively know is not true, and that's that. There is no further discussion about it.
This is what my dad needs to believe, that current wife shares his values. She's happy to let him think that. The kicker: she had him move their estate planning from his former financial advisor to an attorney she knew, who happened to be her son's godfather.
I get it OP.