Anonymous wrote:
Sigh. My grandmother squandered her few million euros, then sued her children for support. Since they couldn't bear to see their mother on the street (however unlovable - she had done nothing for them), they cobbled together a much simpler but acceptable lifestyle for her.
I would consult with your siblings and agree on a plan. That way he doesn't get dribbles of random money from each of you. Everything has to be documented, no one gives more than they can afford, and he should know that there is a set amount every month and NOTHING beyond that. A business agreement, in fact. Leave the emotional stuff out of it.
I do NOT like this approach. OP's dad sounds selfish beyond belief and totally unconcerned with the impact of his "Now you see me... now you don't... now you do again 10 yrs later and I'm relentless with my neediness and whining and requests for money" has on his kids. This is unacceptable.
You and your siblings should get together (I like that part of PPs idea) and see how you are all doing with his re-entry into your lives and his requests. But beyond that and seeing if you have a common idea about how to draw and hold boundaries with him, OP you have to do what you have to do for YOUR sanity and your family.
At this point you owe your dad NOTHING. If there is a level of engagement and support to him that doesn't put you out, stress you out, or disrupt your life, great, maybe figure out how to be clear about that level and give it. But if it's stressful, brings up emotional and other issues that you don't need to add to your daily life, takes resources away that your family needs... or if you just plain don't want to be involved with him... you have EVERY right to just cut him off. Me, I would sit him down in person and explain it, but I understand most people might not want to and would just stop responding. Whatever works for you.
And please don't expect him to ever "get it". Even if you explain the boundaries and why you (and maybe your siblings) are setting them, he is unlikely to change and you shouldn't do it to get him to change. Just do it because it serves everyone better if you are clear about what and why. What he does with the information is his responsibility, although hopefully he will learn something from it.
Lastly, while I agree that his money was his money and it's not really legit to complain to him about him spending "your inheritance", it IS fair for you to point to his reckless/unwise financial decisions and be clear with him: that's on him. He wasted his money, he wasn't in your lives, he canNOT expect you guys to support him. At all.
Good luck OP, if you can please come back and tell us what approach you ended up taking and what happened. Sucky situation, wish you the best.