I apologize in advance for my rant, but I just have to get this out. My mother passed a few months back. For the most part, she had her legal affairs in order with her 3 children as equal beneficiaries per her will. The only exception was an insurance policy left to an older child many many years ago with the expectation that the older sibling would look out for the other 2 younger siblings. I truly believe it was a complete oversight as to why my mother didn't update the beneficiary information.
Fast forward to today, all sibs are fully grown and that older sibling didn't lift a finger during mother's four year cancer journey. They may have visited a total of 5x for a total of 10 hours and maybe called once a week if that. Reason given "I'm busy".
I know there is nothing I can do if this sibling decides to keep that entire insurance policy. I was the one who scraficed and cared for my mother and would do it again. My other sibling helped me out as much as they could and fully supports me. So my question would be how could someone dishonor their parent and live with themselves knowing full well the intent of their parent wishes? I have much faith and I shutter to think what's going to happen to this soon to be estranged sibling.
Thanks for listening.
That goes for siblings, spouses, parents, etc.
You have known this to be the case for some time.
These people live with themselves very nicely, and often pass along without a care in the world; I myself don't believe in kharma or divine retribution.
These people are best left to their own devices and their own lives; that seems to have been the case all these years anyway. And on you go with a good life of your own, treasuring your memories and knowing you did a great job.
Just get on with life, and make it good, make it quality, make it as happy as you can. I wish you the best and am sorry for your loss.
Remember what you did for your mum and be proud of the kind of person you are, really proud. Now go and treat yourself accordingly.
My OB robbed my parents blind, yet in their will, he would have received 1/6th of their estate, just like the rest of us who DIDN'T take their home equity, silver, antiques and coin collections.
OB passed 11 years ago, but the will pre-dated his death and I have to say, that it rankled in my soul that he could be so greedy and STILL inherit the same as the rest of us.
It's less than $10K a piece, but he had bilked mom and dad of almost $200K.
Your sibling has no legal reason to share the insurance proceeds with you. If as you say the policy was set up a long time ago, was it done when you and your other sibling were minors? In which case it makes sense.
No one is obligated to provide care to their parents, or visit etc. Even two siblings who were raised in the same home can have very different upbringings and feelings about providing care. It does not mean one is right and the other wrong.
Agree. Some are like sharks. Swim in, take a huge bite for themselves. Swim away.
Sometimes it is not worth the financial or emotional ruin to go hunt them (unless you have a very strong expectation of success).
The bite has been taken. Best to heal & build a shark net.
As far as what sibling did or didn't do to help, you have to understand some people simply are not caretakers and have no guilt about it. Those who chose to do it - chose to do it. Don't sever the family over the problem that, basically, was created by mom. Not worth it to have a dollar bill cut a relative off.
Start by finding ways to come to terms with what actually happened over the course of your mom's life. Look at what you invested into your mother's life and find peace with yourself over your time commitment. If you have animosity with another person, find a counsellor who can spend a little time with both of you to talk over the issues - and hopefully find pathway to peace and forgiveness for any slights.
Then, look at your relationships with your siblings. figure out which relationships are worth investing more time into and which less time. Learn to let go of animosity and find ways to love.
The money thing is what it is. Let go.
You are going to have to let it go. It would be nice if sibling splits it 3 ways but don't expect it.
Dementia tho, has eaten away at her over years. I seen her independence robbed from her.
Now she lives with me for 14 months, now I care for her full time, regardless of Healthcare providers watch her as I go to work, I take over once I arrive.
Anyway.. yes.. she has a younger son but he don't care anything about her, even skips visiting me at all, don't call or text me because he knows he will be updated about his and my mom so he don't bother at all to communicate with me. I don't believe it bothers him at all that he doesn't care at all. If he's willing to cut me out of his life because I'm caring for our mother he's a cold SOB. I seen that now, the reason I talk about me and him because I loved both he and my mom but in the back of my mind I knew something was off with him and during my mothers decline he faded away but I did not think he would cut me off.
At least your brother made futile attempts. Mine did not at all.. no he don't live in another state like my moms sisters who also stopped communicating with her. He lives a Mile down the road from me.
So yes.. siblings can be very cold..
i agree.
same with my siblings.
and i think, same for many of us.
"but I did not think he would cut me off"
these people only contact if you're useful to them.
if you were a millionaire...i wonder how many times a minute he would call you; how sweetly he'd speak to you.
oh say can you see, what is in it for me...
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let karma take care of it. :)
It is YOUR choice how you approach this issue. You can speak to the issue with your brother, telling him that you think this unequal division might have been an oversight on mom's part and that you trust him to do the right thing.
Or you can leave it alone. Or you can allow it to drive a wedge.
The ball is in your court.
My siblings badgered my cognitively impaired father to change his beneficiary from my mother, to the two of them ~ he died nine days later due to an “accident.”
Months later, as my mother lay dying in a hospital bed, a sibling walked in and, in the last words he spoke to me, they said, “I can only stay an hour.”
I was the primary care support for my parents the last 4 years of their lives and dropped everything at each crisis moment.
I wish you peace as you close that door of that relationship and cherish the bond with your likeminded sibling. It’s okay to let go of people who you will never understand.
Thank you for being the angel to your parent. They knew goodness.
Second...Please don't get me wrong here, but I'm going to play the flip side of this situation. Please realize....Some people are not cut out to be caregivers. Some people realize there is more to life than caregiving. Some people ARE too busy. Perhaps they have obligations to a spouses parent, a disabled child, cannot afford to put their job on the line to care for their parent, perhaps they travel for work or live a long distance away from the sick parent and can't afford to travel often. There are so many scenerios that could legitimately make someone too busy to care for someone. Sounds like you were lucky enough to be able to afford the time and effort to care for your mom. Yaay for you. You go on saying how you were the caregiver and your sibling done nothing. Did you specifically ask this sibling to do anything to help outside of the caregiver part? Such as pay the bills, etc? You said yourself they checked in often. Evidently, that wasn't enough. Some caregivers want to be in charge of it all, then complain no one done anything to help. I'm not saying this is you, just saying. Did you specifically talk to the sibling that inherited the insurance policy about receiving your fair share?
Who had POA who could have helped mom to get this fixed before she passed? Who was in charge of the will? This person had the responsibility to make sure all proceeds were to be divided equally and they failed miserably to split the proceeds up accordingly so that your sibling that inherited the insurance policy would have got their $ and you and the other sibling would have split the rest to make sure that all 3 siblings got their equal fair share.
From what I've read, it sounds to me that you are kicking this sibling to the curb because you didn't get what you think you deserve. As i recall, the policy was for $10K. So your equal share would have been $3,333.33. Life is not fair. Had this sibling mistreated you or disrespected you in any way in the past? Is this sibling putting the insurance $ aside to actually take care of you in some way as you stated or are you assuming the worst? It sounds to me that it's all about you and money. Let that stuff go and get on with your life. If you let estrangement set it, then you've got to realize there is NO chance of getting that money you are wanting so badly. Even if it's your fair share. If you keep positive lines of communication open, at least you've got perhaps a chance to get something. If you feel the need to be upset and put the blame on someone, blame your mom...or better yet, the person who was the representative of the will. . All this could have been eliminated had someone done their job diligently and made sure all the money was fairly distributed. I say Let. it. go. Life is too short.
In today's world, 3K is not a lot of money that you can do much with besides putting a wedge between you and your sibling. Perhaps look at it in the way of the value of your memories with your mom. I'm sure all that extra time with her was worth more than 3K. It's your choice because life is full of choices. Good luck to you.
BTW I have nothing to do with my brother; I don’t want someone like that in my life regardless that we’re related.
We are also told to forgive many many times. I understand that to mean we may have to continually forgive someone for the same offense.
I struggle with the forgiveness part too and know I must forgive, but also know it is easier said than done.
The second thing is that when we prepare for our own last weeks/months/years and for the disbursement of our own estates, we should not assume that our children will do as we expect. Set up funds (if there is any money) for your own care, and assume that whoever cares for you should be paid from those funds, as long as they last. Have an attorney help you set up a will to govern the dispersal of everything in your estate and make your estate the beneficiary of insurance policies and investment and savings accounts. Leaving accounts to one child in the belief that that child will provide care or will share with others is silly. It rarely turns out that way. Everything should go into one pot that can be divided along the lines you choose. It does not need to be divided equally.
I wish my Mom had left instructions in her will to leave the bulk of her estate to the two sisters who spent more time caring for her than any of the rest of us. Not that the estate is worth much, anyway. However, I wish that Mom had acknowledged the two with a shared half of her "massive" $5,000 estate and shared the rest between the remaining 3 of us. Or maybe she should have given it all to them. I got a few family heirlooms from the house and really didn't need or want anything else. Naturally, I tried to sign my share over to my younger sister, who both deserves and needs it more than I, but she won't take it.
I do not understand this odd compulsion to try to make everything equal in death when nothing is even close to equal in life. Nevertheless, you did what you wanted to do for your mother. I hope you can achieve some peace and satisfaction with that and ignore the money. It is not worth your time and energy to worry over something over which you have no control. Sympathies and hugs.
Also, you can’t change your sibling’s behavior or make him split the inheritance he received. All you can do is change your own behavior - how you react and live with the event.
He’s obviously not going to change, so you have to make peace with that and move on, so you can live your best life - or it inhabit a piece of your soul.
I have been free of resentment and contact for 40 years and I'm grateful that I took the high road. When we carry the burden of hate, we weigh ourselves down and set limitations on our happiness: don't do that!