Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she’s already preventing him from seeing his children and grandchildren at Christmas, the war is over and you lost. The inheritance is gone. There’s nothing you can do at this point.
She is still girl friend not wife.
Unless she is a wife and OP doesn’t know about it yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six pages, posters arguing and still no follow up answers from OP??? 🧐
Well done in Troll World.
OP. I've been reading the responses and thinking it through.
Regarding inheritance: so, it's not about money for me. If he gave it all to my siblings, or to charity, or whatever, I wouldn't care. And actually, I don't think I would mind if he left it to a wife/girlfriend under some circumstances, like when she passed it was divided evenly among all the kids, and if she wasn't actively trying to cut him off from his kids.
But the whole thing is just so suspicious to me. She stopped working shortly after she moved in, and is now trying to keep him away from his own family. That doesn't sit well with me at all. Ultimately I want him to be happy, and I can't imagine he's very happy supporting a second family and not seeing his own family.
Anonymous wrote:That’s heartbreaking. This happened to my ex husband after he met his girlfriend- not allowed to see kids, friends, family.
It’s controlling behavior.
Anonymous wrote:My dad’s long term girlfriend moved in with him this past year and slowly she’s been getting more and more control over him. It’s now at the point where he barely sees his kids and grandkids, even though some of them live 3 minutes away. If he comes over, she calls nonstop because she “needs” him to come home and open a jar or whatever.
This Christmas, he didn’t see his own kids or grandkids and got them no presents bc GF decided “no gifts” this year. They spent the day with her kids and got them gifts.
Really sad about this. I don’t care so much about the gifts - money isn’t important - but that he’s now not even allowed to see his own family. I really never thought he would let a woman control him this much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Confront him before it’s too late.
You have nothing to lose. Take the high road and you’ll be watching all his stuff go to her kids, and you’ll be begging for th photo albums.
lol. Yeah, going after the inheritance is definitely the way to rebuild a relationship.
Anonymous wrote:With that attitude, I can't imagine why she doesn't want to spend time with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six pages, posters arguing and still no follow up answers from OP??? 🧐
Well done in Troll World.
OP. I've been reading the responses and thinking it through.
Regarding inheritance: so, it's not about money for me. If he gave it all to my siblings, or to charity, or whatever, I wouldn't care. And actually, I don't think I would mind if he left it to a wife/girlfriend under some circumstances, like when she passed it was divided evenly among all the kids, and if she wasn't actively trying to cut him off from his kids.
But the whole thing is just so suspicious to me. She stopped working shortly after she moved in, and is now trying to keep him away from his own family. That doesn't sit well with me at all. Ultimately I want him to be happy, and I can't imagine he's very happy supporting a second family and not seeing his own family.
Anonymous wrote:Six pages, posters arguing and still no follow up answers from OP??? 🧐
Well done in Troll World.
Anonymous wrote:Op, this is how it’s been with my dad since I was a teen. I’ve had to detach myself so as not to feel immense sadness. But he married someone who is hostile to his kids and grandkids, is extremely controlling, at times outright abusive to him (he admitted it once a few years ago after a particularly nasty rage filled blowup). My sibling and I have had a tenuous relationship with him ever since, we try to maintain contact but it’s limited and especially now that he is elderly and frail, she is in control. Over the years she has isolated him from family and friends, he walks on eggshells around her so as to not ignite her rage (and he is dependent on her now to drive etc). I make an effort to stay in contact but I’ve had to let go of hope that my dad will ever be capable of a genuine relationship with his kids or grandkids. He has shut himself down emotionally over the years as a strategy to avoid conflict and as a result he cannot connect with anyone. A brilliant and incredibly successful person with no inner life. At least, not with family.
He’s currently in the hospital and I have to work around her to see him this week. I will attempt to get him alone to see if he still want her in charge: I worry with his infirmity she will become more abusive (she is angry at his illness and acts like he’s faking) and that he might prefer assisted living but I doubt he will be able to make that call. I have a feeling he is going to die soon and it breaks my heart but he has made his choice, over and over. My only advice is that you keep lines of communication open but establish your boundaries as well.
As for inheritance, it’s fine to ask your dad if he’s made plans to put his estate in a trust and who is the executor, but I have come to expect nothing (even though my stepmom is independently very wealthy and has no kids). I of course, it’s one more blow, emotionally, not really about the money at all but the idea that we could mean so little to this man, who once loved us so dearly, and that he could choose , over and over, a woman who has been consistently nasty to his children, grandchildren (who blows up at a 7 year old?), brother and nephew….anyone with a connection threatens her. Sorry for the diatribe, realized this was much more about me than OP but this ksbhownitbstaryed with my dad (albeit when he was in his 40s not 70s).