Anonymous wrote:I need preemptive advice, please!
They are thinking my mother will be moved into hospice care soon. Long story short, I don’t have a close, or really any, relationship with my living aunts or cousins on my mother’s side. Our relationships are cordial at best as my mother is declining. They try to insert themselves into her care, because they are notorious busybodies who care more about being in control than they care about my mother, but that’s a story for a different time.
My mother still has a house full of “stuff”. Not a hoarder by any means, but rooms full of an average amount of old furniture. There are some items of sentimental/familial value that I know these aunts/cousins will come looking to claim. My mother HAS a will, and has many things left to people in said will. But I know they will want to come poke through everything looking for more, and will disagree with me just disposing and/or donating the rest. Most things are truly worthless, and I don’t have time, energy, or desire to profit from any of it. I will make fast work of clearing her house.
So I’m pondering what to do. Do I allow them a set time on a set day to poke around for what they want, stipulating they come with Uhauls or equivalent to take it THEN? Or do I just not even invite the drama, give them just what’s stated in the will, and do what I want despite their protests?
Anonymous wrote:I need preemptive advice, please!
They are thinking my mother will be moved into hospice care soon. Long story short, I don’t have a close, or really any, relationship with my living aunts or cousins on my mother’s side....
My mother still has a house full of “stuff”...r HAS a will, and has many things left to people in said will....
Anonymous wrote:
1. You give them what's in the will.
2. Then you secure the things you want for yourself, that you are entitled to under the terms of the will.
3. Finally, you bring people in to choose additional items at their leisure. This will lead to fights, maybe, but at least you'll have made the gesture.
Anonymous wrote:You would rather donate or throw things away than let family who want them have them? That's incredibly selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing you describe sounds like greed. It sounds like grieving sisters who want sentimental items. From your title, I expected a story about millions of dollars. But elderly sisters who want some valueless clothes and jewelry their sister owned because they love her? That’s not greed. That’s profound grief.
If you don’t care about anything, let them wander around the house. Why would you even care? Let them take what they want. Once it’s out of your house, it’s one more item you don’t have to deal with.
You sound like the issue here more than anything.
You don’t know them or their relationship with my mother, so I’m asking you to trust me. It’s maybe not greed, you’re right. It’s control, then.
I don’t care what they take at all, but I don’t have time or energy to fool around while they argue about it, nor do I want to halt progress by holding on to things while they nickel and dime buyers on the internet and claim they don’t have a place to store the things. I don’t have the energy to fight with them.