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When my mother died at 98, she was still in her right mind. She had lived by herself and even drove until 95. I am retired and lived 500 miles away. Since my sister was still working, I took my mother to live with me the last 3 years of her life. I helped her dress and bathe; I emptied the bedside potty chair; I took her to her appointments, etc, etc, etc. You as caregivers understand the lifestyle changes. I willingly gave up my life in order to help her through her final years. But right now, I am unable to grieve because of anger---no that word is insufficient to describe my feelings…. rage is more accurate.

At her death I discovered that two years before she came to live with me, she changed her will. She left my sister the house, a trailer, the property, and half of her money. My sister told me after the funeral that she was aware of the will change and that she and my mother chose not to tell me. At times my mother and I had conversations where she told me that she didn’t need to worry about me because I was capable, dependable, and responsible.

The fact that the larger share of the estate went to my sister doesn’t overly concern me because since I am capable, dependable, and responsible, I am financially secure. My difficulty is that my mother did not tell me; even though she was living in my home and I was her only caregiver, she let me continue to believe that her estate was divided equally. I feel betrayed by the woman to whom I devoted the past three years. This I see as a lie of omission; I am hurt that my mother would deal with me as such----don’t I deserve to know why I was treated that way----with no explanation and now, at her death, no chance to understand why she chose not to tell me?

It also hurts that my sister had cleaned out my mother’s lock box and after the funeral surprised me the secret will. I talked to my mother’s lawyer and was told, “Yes, this was her last will,” and that he had written it for her.

Am I over reacting? How can I let go of the perceived unfairness---not in the property division but in the secretiveness ---the ‘ganging up’ of my mother and sister to deceive me? My mother believed in family, and at her death she killed her remaining family. I refuse to argue with or express my rage to my sister because nothing I say will change what has happened. My plan is to silently withdraw…I guess the proper term for it is passive aggressiveness. If my sister calls, I will talk decently to her, but because of what I call treachery, I will make no effort to continue or support a relationship with her. Thus, over the years, our lives will become separate.

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Shoot, I wouldn't talk to her at all. What will you hear? More Lies? Since your sister is incapable, unreliable and irresponsible she will be flat broke in no time at all. She'll be calling you for help. You just hold your head high, you did your part and she will reap what she has sown.
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I imagine your mom was torn between a need to help your sister and her need to be helped by you. Your mom clearly understood that you are more self-reliant and successful while it sounds like your sister hasn't been able to manage her own affairs well. She probably feared that telling you would change her relationship with you and perhaps jeopardize your care of her. That's not to excuse what your mom did, just to understand her possible motives.

It seems that many parents try to keep helping the child who has been a screw-up their whole lives, much to the detriment to the child who has been successful and responsible. It's. Not. Fair.

I would feel exactly as you do, but I'd also be grateful that I have the ability to take care of myself, which it sounds like your sister lacks. You'll always be better off than she will, even without half of the estate. If she's not a good person, I'd feel no compunction to keep her in my life. You might consider some counseling, just so your anger doesn't get in the way of your own happiness and/or relationship with your sister, if it would be helpful to you. Hugs...
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I am so sorry for you. While your mother knew this and I agree with Blannie, it was wrong. The generation before us did not discuss painful things. Our generation, talks, medicates and writes books and journals on dysfunctions. Your mother might have felt guilt and helpless as her health declined. Time is not a friend here as it makes a situation even more difficult.
Is your sister manipulative? I bet she is, but it doesn't matter. Unless some divine intervention happens (it can) your sister will not change. The damage is done, if you are a person of faith try praying for her. SHE NEEDS IT This will help YOU.
Please get with someone to help you with your justified anger.
You honored your mother, it is the RIGHT thing for YOU. Fortunately, TIME is a friend here.
Do NOT let this sister spoil any of your GOODNESS as it hurts only YOU.
I also wish you peace and understanding for your mother. I believe in TIME you will have healing.
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I had a similar...my Mom was an only child. She and my dad enjoy winters in sunny Florida and summers at the Yacht Club. My sister and I took care of our Nanny in her final years. The other two - the oldest and only grand son, and youngest granddaughter, not at ALL. When Nan passed...guess who was first in line for the "lion's share?" You bet. My sister, you and I will all get our rewards when it counts...Not of this world.
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clarification: Speaking of a Grandmother One Daughter and 4 Grandchildren above, The 2 "middle" sisters did all the work.
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You are right to be hurt. I wonder if your sister lead this or if it was your mothers idea. If it was your mothers idea, I could forgive my sister because the "news" was not hers to tell, it was your morher's.
I would not cut her out, if your relationship has other depth to it.
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Margie, You have the right to be angry, so be angry for a small while, then tell yourself that you are above all this. Probably your mother wasn't "in right mind" as much as you think. She was being manipulated by your sister. You really were played for a fool. I know this forgiveness is a difficult thing, but it is a good boundary. I would have nothing at all to do with sister. She sounds like a not nice person. You don't need it.
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margieanne, I am not as gracious as many others in the group are. I am angry for you. How in the world did your mother let you serve her, knowing what she had done. Shame on her! I am so sorry. We all wish that people would be upright and fair. It is always disappointing when they aren't. Since your sister was working, I don't know why your mother would see her as being more in need. Do you have any idea why they did this behind your back. I would be mad, too. You've earned the right to be mad.
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Gosh angry? im fuming just reading this. How unfair and so thoughtless of your mother you cannot change a will if you are not of sound mind so that's bullshit. this isn't about whos responsible or not in life this is about inheritance that should be divided between the children evenly so as not to leave any bad feelings. My mum in a row recently told my brother she was taking me out of her will I heard from another room? dementia or not I would walk out and never forgive her or see her again. the fact that she said it made me so mad as she uses this to control family do what I say or I cut you out of my will? most of the time its rants but It does scare me that in her madness she would do that just to hurt me. Im the only one that cares about her and looks after her and this is the shit we get?
I am so sorry for you I wish I could win the lotto and give you enough to smear all over your sisters face! she knew and don't ever underestimate what family will do or say to get more inheritance if your sister had any morals she would give you your share. This is the worst ive heard yet im so angry for you and yes its the sneaky way they did it your mother should have discussed this with you. gosh sometimes I think parents go out of their way to cause S*** when they die. Try and let the anger go it will eat you up ask your sister if she knew? also does she think its fair? what if she was the main carer?
My sister does NOTHING to help care for mum but when shes home she buys her everything meals out etc... she is playing my mum at her game and sucking up to her by money shes clever she knows mums life has always been about money and the more my sis spends on her she thinks mum will give her a bigger share of the house?? maybe she will? all the tea in china would not make up for the caring we do!
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meh, my oldest sis recieved a modular home on three acres in the country quite by default. banks wont lend on a modular over 20 yrs old so we didnt want to pour money into it only for it to sit and deteriorate. i put in 6 yrs of inhome care for mom and the will read that i could live in moms home for the remainder of my life if i chose but i have a house and missed it fiercely those 6 years. mother died, i was home in 24 hours. the younger sis got 9 k which wasnt bad as mom and her never really got along well. i recieved an 18 k ira that will shrink to about12k when the taxes are resolved.. im happy with that, it got my business tooling back in shape. the sis with the homestead probably got the better deal because mom wanted the hopeless thugs set up . none of us plan to burn bridges because there was no deceipt or shady dealings. one sis and niece wanna stay on trikeridin terms with me. the sis with the homestead lets me keep my masonry sign in her front yard on a most crucial county highway. the worst thing that could happen is homestead sis taking my sign down. that wont happen cause debby got the home and property and the business sign is imo a small concession to make to be able to walk into a fully stocked house with only property taxes to pay.
on the subject of being decieved by the elder, my ex right now is trying to convince jake that she has a 100k life policy with him as beneficiary. i do not believe that. ex's older son is mommys yes man . ex has had a couple of mild strokes and anticipating needing jakes caregiver help. i think shes conning him because in his gruff way he is the caregiver type , his brother altho moms favorite imo would make a laughable elder carer.
so yea i see parents having to consider each personality when they are forced to divide property. and the screwup that every family has is likely to be set up in the most failsafe way possible so hopefully they wont screw it up.
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Sorry for how you are taking these circumstances. If you previously had a good relationship with your sister I suggest that you try to keep it rather than lose more of your family. If not, oh well. It's easy sometimes for us to think that we are equal to our siblings in the eyes of our parents, (and therefore should share equally in the caregiving and in what is left to us). I suggest that we aren't equal. We don't known as much about the lives, problems, history and needs of our siblings as we think. How many postings there are where a caregiver doesn't get what they need from others, siblings included. We are absorbed with ourselves and what we are dealing with. Sometimes a parent nay be privy to one child's needs and feel the need to provide for that, without any evil manipulation by that child or feeling that they need to disclose those plans to the other child. They are protecting one child, and probably not meaning to hurt the other. Would you feel this was unfair if your sister had a disability or other problem you were aware of? Would you have cared for your mother differently if they had disclosed this to you before? If yes, why? What would have made the difference to you? Let your current anger cool off. How does your sister feel? Guilty she wasn't supposed to tell you? Or gleeful? Don't pull away and crawl off unto some passive-aggressive state of being. You can stay in that cave forever. Wouldn't you rather have a sister that you could talk to about you mom and your shared history? Give it some thought.
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Margieann, you have a legal right to challenge the will in probate court. This sounds so deceitful!

I believe in the afterlife and God judging each newly deceased person. My first husband's mother was a rich widow for many years and after our split told me she did not want me around (and that included bringing only grandchild, my beautiful daughter, to visit). Nasty 1st mother in law did not have a will but a "Trust" and supposedly stipulated that our daughter (and her only grandchild) would NEVER be permitted to inherit any of the monies. I am seething over this. My grown daughter does not know of this financial "rejection" by her paternal grandmother (now deceased 6 years). I believe in a God who values kindness and charity when He judges a newly deceased person's soul: Can you imagine how God must have "assessed" this toxic grandmother? My daughter (her granddaughter) is innocent and NEVER hurt this woman!

A child is a precious gift! I lost two unborn babies to miscarriage and have two adult children. I am looking forward to being a grandmother in my own elder years and showing unconditional love. Death is inevitable. We cannot control out goods, property, money and other tangible assets from the grave after we depart this world. We have stewardship over our material things, and we have stewardship over showing love to our children (and grandkids). What assessment of charity did God the Supreme Being find in this emotionally bankrupt grandmother in her stubborn decision to cast her only grandaughter aside financially? Her honor roll, achieving, kept her virginity, refuted drug abuse, worked part time prep school grad grandaughter? What did God say? I wonder????????


We are asked by God (not organized religion so much) to open our hearts and demonstrate unconditional love with charity to our spouse, our child, out grown child, our grandchild, our neighbor. God does not want us, the imperfect human, playing His role. He asks us to love.

Someday I will be a grandmother and I will love my grandchild with kindness, shared experiences (not just material gifts). Grandchild(ren) will have a term life insurance beneficiary from a fraternal society, just like my grandparents did for me.
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I understand. But the Almighty never promised fairness to anybody in this world Accept that you were done a wrong and move on. The end.
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As someone who found out about lies and secrets in her own family, I can say I TOTALLY understand where you are coming from. It isn't about money, it is about bonds, love, trust and relationships. It is about finding out the person you trusted and loved, cared for and sacrificed for, betrayed you. I know the feeling, it has happened to me as well with my mother.

My mother is a healthy 83 year old who decided (along with my now deceased father) that I wasn't to be trusted. No real reason for that.They put my brother on all their POAs, executor of the will, on her checking accounts, everything. I am not to know anything. But over time I realized the true reason they did what they did was to enrich my brother. My dad was jealous of my husband and his success in life. Dad wanted to enrich his son. Dad never gave me 2 seconds thought. And, yes, it made me very angry.

Take another look at your mother and sister. Ask yourself if there is a dysfunction of some sort there. Maybe, like me, you could have seen this coming. I know I see it coming and my golden brother will take care of my mother like it or not.

I want to tell you as someone who has been there, don't let this ruin your life. And unless your sister steps forward and shares her inheritance with you, no, I would not trust her ever again.
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There is a situation like this going on in my extended family; my uncle changed his will, leaving what remained of his estate to his two two living children and not to the grandchildren of his deceased daughter, who was in fact the favorite. The deceased daughter left a large estate, her children are set for life, as are their children. Grandchildren are no longer speaking to their aunt and uncle due to this "betrayal". Either let it go--money and love are not the same commodity, or simply withdraw from your family and find good friends to rely on. Don't pick at the scab. Talk to a therapist if you seek to forgive your mother.
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Your mother and your sister knew what they were doing. I understand the betrayal you fee. When mom died last year, some of my siblings told relatives that the bereavement money will go to me for caregiving mom this past 23 years. Well, when they saw all that money, they all decided to divide it evenly among us 7 kids (not to share with father, the surviving spouse, nor my oldest sister - who only recently helped me to caregive both parents.) Something changed in our relationship. I never knew that they would do this to me. Only baby brother gave me most of his portion of the money. After that, I have basically stopped writing to them. Something has changed and I no longer see them as I used to.

I read your comments, and I just go soooo angry! Your sister is a backstabber. She's selfish and greedy. If she truly have any sisterly love for you, she would have said, "Margieanne, although mom left me the bulk of her stuff, I want to split it because you did the hard work of caring for her." Actions Speak Louder than Words. It's not really about the money. It's the Betrayal - from Family and not from strangers. That just hurts so deeply. I'm sooooo sorry!!! {{{HUGS}}}
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Ouch. Just, ouch.

You have every right to feel outraged. The arrangement your mother made for the distribution of her property was reasoned out, and you're satisfied that her will was properly drawn up. No problem. The inescapable inference that she was not confident that you would understand or agree with her reasoning; the fact that she did discuss this freely with your sister, who also - no doubt with some sense of righteousness about keeping your mother's confidence - saw fit to leave you out of the loop; I can only imagine how insulted you feel. Their actions, from which you justifiably infer their attitudes to you, constitute an outrage. Bloody hell.

Now what? What do you do when you have been treated and characterised so bloody unfairly? What CAN you do? What will abbreviate and minimise the hurt?

1. Take your time. How long is it since your mother passed away? Don't forget that this outrage blind-sided you at the very moment when you are dealing with normal grief. Give yourself extra time to get your balance back, on top of time for mourning.
2. Remember that your mother's and sister's assessment of you *on this particular point* is DEAD WRONG. But people do get things wrong, don't they? We are all faulty. We all misjudge situations and other people from time to time. They got this really, really wrong and have treated you extremely badly as a consequence. If you could only put them in a room and explain, I expect they would be extremely sorry. But you can't; and even as it is, it doesn't have to poison everything. Don't let it.
3. When you are good and ready, and not before, face up to what has happened and take it on the chin. Acknowledge the injustice to yourself. Set it aside. Carry on regardless. You won't be able to do this for a while, and you are entitled to feel very sore in the meantime. But in the end, to be true to yourself, you should continue your relationship with your sister as you would have done HAD you been properly consulted at the time when your mother decided her will: accepting your mother's reasoning and her decisions, accepting the implied compliment - and it is a compliment - to your character and your achievements, and accepting her trust that your care for her in her last years was rooted in love and entirely separated from material considerations.

This is, of course, a counsel of perfection. You don't have to accomplish it perfectly, you are entitled to have lapses and setbacks. But I do believe that that is the course that will give you the best outcome. I'm so sorry for the hurt you've suffered in addition to the loss of your mother.
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if your mom was thinking she would have given you the most so that it would pay out and you could help the sister instead of your sister going thru it and loosing it and it all being a waste. financially responsibly people should be in charge-you can't change irresponsible people overnite just b/c you give them something to be responsible for.
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Here's another thought. When sis goes through all the assets she has, who will she turn to? Who will be there to enable her to continue her ways? Your mother has enabled her to continue her behavior, she has been rewarded. But where does it stop? I hope you never give her a penny. And if you ever consider doing so, reread these posts and give it some thought.
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Your title is wrong -- there is no "perceived" unfairness, as you probably realize from reading these responses. This was just, plain "unfair."

One other person mentioned that parents often have the responsible child take care of them and give more of their assets to the irresponsible one. As they age and their common sense starts to go, I have to think they believe it's fair in some way. Somehow, they rationalize that the responsible one is taken care of so that they need nothing else. Somehow, maybe they think they're righting the world's wrongs -- maybe that the responsible one was born "more capable" or something? Maybe the parent secretly feels guilt that they didn't bring the irresponsible one up properly and that that's why that child can't or won't function responsibility and that the parent should make up for it.

I'm not a psychologist -- just pondering all this out loud since there's a little of this in my family, too. But here are the main points:
1. It's unfair and you have a right to feel hurt.
2. Whatever your Mom's motive, while she did deceive you, it's hard to know exactly what she was thinking. Was she manipulating you into taking care of her, trying to spare your feelings, trying to keep you and your sister from getting into a huge argument? It's hard to know.
3. Your sister knew about this and I suspect did nothing to make a case that it was unfair to you. She says that both she and Mom decided not to tell you, not that Mom made her promise not to tell you. It sounds like they did this, together.

So, what I would ask you when you say you have strained conversations with your sister is this:
What do you get out of talking to your sister? Is there some point to talking to her? What is your contact about? Is it necessary?

What I'm trying to ask is whether you feel you'd miss her if she was out of your life? Do you speak with her because you feel sorry for her or some guilt about not having more contact? If you don't enjoy the calls, don't feel like you should bother with them, don't have a purpose in them, I don't know why you'd bother having any contact. Maybe I'm one that holds a grudge too long but, to me, that's just a way to extend the pain of the betrayal.
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H'm. Margieanne says that her sister is still working; and Margieanne herself makes no reference to her sister's being financially irresponsible or feckless, as such.

I understand that it is impossible for most of us, ordinary mortals, not to anticipate with some relish the downfall and humiliation of those we have some reason to resent; on occasion I indulge in these pleasant daydreams myself, I admit; but I do not get the impression that they would give Margieanne much satisfaction. I think more highly of her than that.
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Good point Countrymouse. I reread the post and the sister is working. So why did she get more? Is Margieanne to be penalized because she has been more successful, responsible and financially sound. The fact that the mother thought Margieanne was more responsible leads me to believe the sister has done something in the past to be irresponsible.

I would like to know if the sister has been irresponsible or reckless with her money. Or is she just an unlucky individual who needed help. Either way, they should have been more honest with Margieanne. No one likes secrets, especially when those secrets are about themselves.
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I read this and completely understand your rage, anger, hurt, betrayal and they are all validated. You know you will never understand this or get closure because mom took it to her grave and was a coward to not tell you.

I suspect she knew well that it wasn't "fair" but wanted to take care of both of you and make sure your sister had what she perceived she needed.

It is a shame that she couldn't tell you that before hand, but suspected you would react that your sister "should grow up, take responsibility, will squander it" yada yada. And you know you would....I know I would! She and dad probably propped sister up many times in her life and this was the final blow.

I think you will just have to make the decision to let it go, be satisfied that "you know you were wronged and betrayed" and move on. There are many of us that have had similar played out. I say to myself, moms estate is hers to divide up or give away anyway she wants.

I would be angry with sis, not cause she got favored but because she didn't tell you and knowing you were hurt wouldn't say "I know what mom did wasn't fair--do you want part of mine so we can make it equal" and then you could say, "no, it's okay, you need X more than me". Now mom has created a chasm between you and sis that will always carry the hurt.

Let go and don't let this spoil your future. Cry, grieve it, write sis a long letter journaling your feelings of betrayal. Let her make the next move.
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Palmtrees, or it could be that… well, to be honest, it could be anything, couldn't it. My sister is so much wealthier (deserved, I'm not crabbing about it) than my mother that my mother's bequest would effectively be petty cash. My brothers would be - how can I put it? - made easier in their minds. I'm right up a gum tree whatever happens! - but I don't expect my mother to deal with it for me.

Legacies aren't necessarily supposed to right all wrongs or level all playing fields. I think, in Margieanne's case, it's just such a damnable, stupid, unjust shame her mother didn't take her into her confidence.
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Countrymouse, I agree.
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Don't get me wrong. I am angry that her family did this to her as well. I just don't understand the unjustness in the world. How can people do this to each other?
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Margieanne, I think your feelings are completely justified. Withdrawing from your sister until you feel ready to deal with her (if ever) is a reasonable response.
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They can do this because they don't think about anyone else's feelings other than their own. They don't care if they hurt someone else as long as they are happy. They justify everything they do and it is always someone else's fault if that someone gets mad or is hurt. As long as they are happy, then everyone should be happy. It is all about me, me, and more me.
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Palm, I really like what you said about me, me and me again and again, me. Is there more of that than there used to be or is there just more media coverage of it? It seems like everywhere I turn I read about me-ism.
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Brandy, I could go on all day about the me-ism. There are actual proper research studies that show that it's getting worse. Reasons include rising income inequality and the resulting every-man-for-himself attitude, celebrity culture seeping into people's everyday view of the world, social media providing a platform for constant self-expression, media reports of crime creating distrust. Stuff like that. Compare with the society of 1914, which was by no means perfect (and certainly people got cut out of wills back then too), but knowing and helping your neighbours, being involved in community things through your place of worship, etc - all of that was taken for granted, it was just what you did. Now people feel put upon if a conversation doesn't totally revolve around them.
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