Wealthy son asks his 60-year-old parents not to leave him any money in their will because his brother and sister are greedy: 'My parents seem offended that I don't want their money.'

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  • Elderly couple sitting on a couch indoors
  • Am I wrong for asking my parents not to leave me any money in their will?

    My parents are only on their late sixties. Hopefully they have many many years left. Last year they called me siblings and I to talk about their will.
  • They want to spread everything evenly. I don't think this is fair. Firstly they are still alive and active.
  • They need to take care of themselves first. Secondly I don't need their money. I am a pipeline welder.
  • I have more money than I will ever need. Not bragging. I have worked hard d for every cent.
  • If you think it's easy why doesn't everyone do it? Thirdly my brother and sister are greedy assholes.
  • Let them have whatever is left after our parents are done with it. I said that nicer though.
  • I also said I want some sentimental stuff they have. My grandpa's rodeo buckles, and Stetson.
  • My mom's recipe book. A copy of the family photo albums. Even just scans are fine.
  • A person holding a book with pictures of people on it
  • That sort of stuff. I will come clean here and say the buckles are silver and gold.
  • They are also collectors items. But I want to display them not sell them. My brother and sister think I'm playing some sort of reverse psychology game on my parents.
  • A man and a woman sitting next to each other
  • My parents seem offended that I don't want their money. I'm lost. I thought being honest was a good thing.
  • UdonLurker TBH it sounds less like rejection and more like you valuing memories over money, which is rare and kind of refreshing. If anything, it just shows you want your parents, not their assets
  • First_Match_3128 Original Poster's Reply I hope they are healthy and happy as long as possible.
  • doggotis 1 My same thoughts about my parents. I'm a retired union elevator mechanic on a pension, soon to start receiving SS. My parents are well off, but I don't expect anything and my bother and sister can have it all. I pretty much told them so. My parents are late 70's, early 80's.
  • Airfrying_witch First, a will is for when they are dead, not before then. Also very smart to do this before any extreme or condition impairing events to have things squared away. Handling late parents estates is no walk in the park if they didn't do their due diligence prior. Also notoriously brings out a really ugly side of people like your siblings involved. Second, and third, that's awesome you could build wealth and be that comfortably confident you need no inheritance + I'm wondering if you
  • PassengerRelevant991 It sounds like your parents want to do this for you. It's the last stage of their taking care of you. Even though you don't need the money, I think it would be kinder to accept their gift, rather than snub them.
  • Scenarioing "Firstly they are still alive and active. They need to take care of themselves first." \---Wills exist because people can die at any moment. Also, having a a will doesn't mean people can't or won't take care of themselves. It doesn't mean there will even be any money left over for anyone to inherit. "I have more money than I will ever need." \---Inheriting money doesn't mean yo have to keep it. You can donate it or whatever. Also, you can disclaim the inheritance and you won't get it
  • lazy__goth My gran did this with her items - she started giving them away before she even became ill. I'm not the wealthiest cousin but like you I put far more value in memories. I started going through her old photos with her, putting them in an album that I said I'd keep and hold for the family (which I have, it frequently gets loaned out and brought to family gatherings). It became our thing to do, and I made more lovely memories with her before she died. Perhaps you could do similar?
  • Barbsayshi I'm in a similar position with my dad and my siblings. My sister wants EVERYTHING and she wants it NOW. My brother thinks he's clever by biding his time and then thinks he and his wife will swoop in and grab everything and all I want (or would like) is a photo album and a lamp that's been in the family forever. My dad cannot get his head around this at all!
  • CarterPFly I think YTA dispite your intentions. Don't be telling your parents what they are and are not allowed to leave you when they pass away. That not your decision, it's not your choice. Saying "Im so rich I don't need any help from you, sure, anything you leave me makes no difference anyway" is deeply insulting. They worked hard to have what they have to leave you. Saying, sure" My siblings need it more than I do" is also deeply insulting to them. It may be true, but its still an assholes

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