Widow mom hid college money meant for her son until he was 48-years-old so that he'd help her around the house for all of his 20s: 'If I had the money when I was 20, I’d have finished college.'

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    Elderly mother, who hid her son's college bonds from him for years, so that he wouldn't have the autonomy to attend college.
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    Mother held onto college bonds and didn’t give them to me till I was 48

    I didn't go to college in my 20's because I didn't have money. Did my best by working full time and attending junior college full time, but the money | made was only just
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    enough to get meh grades and make enough to just float by. By the time it was time to transfer I knew I didn't have enough money to go so I concentrated on
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    working and saving as much as I could. My father d..d when I was 8, so when my mother saw I was working 12ish hours a day, she insisted I help with the house and so I
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    did, as well as pay for misc expenses and my younger brother's school needs. Years pass, never did save enough to go back, so the military became an option around
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    30. When I got out at 36 due to injuries sustained overseas, I leveraged the GI Bill to finish my engineering degree and finished at 41.
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    U.S. ARMY
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    Anyway, I just found out my dad put away money for me every month when he was alive in the form of educational bonds. More than enough to have gone. I looked it up
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    and it was about 10% of his base pay that he put away. For whatever reason my mom just never gave it to me till recently. I'm now 48. I'm having a hard time
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    processing this. If I had the money when I was 20, I'd have finished college. If I had it back then I'd have started a family far earlier and not have spent $240k on IVF. I'd also not
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    The man's wife gets IVF treatments, which could've been avoided if they hadn't had to wait so long to start their family.
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    be walking around with a cane. I feel like I missed out on living life from 20 to 36, all because my mother chose to not give the money my father intentionally set aside for me.
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    I'm looking for opinions on how to handle this. Be it mentally, physically, legally, whatever. I know this has been eating me up mentally and reducing me physically due to the stress.
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    Tall-Compote 1354 I think you need to find a good therapist as soon as possible. I was filled with rage reading this and it isn't me and I don't even know you. You have to find a professional to help yourself. You deserved better.
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    I_Braid_Armpit_Hair OP You're probably right. VA has recommended this to me but VA is being the VA and they claim they called me to schedule an appt but didn't.
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    ThePensiveE To add, they're going to be better prepared to help you navigate whatever the journey coming to peace with your mother looks like. It's going to be an ongoing process. I wish you well on the journey.
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    Educational-Dirt4059 Did your mother explain herself because
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    I_Braid_Armpit_Hair OP She has not as I haven't asked her. Tbh part of my is afraid of the answer, that it'll be astounding stupid, but somehow my fault. My wife wants me to talk to my mother, as my wife can tell my mother knows I don't want to talk to her. It's a nerve thing. I just haven't built up enough nerve to ask, nor be ready for her answer.
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    cant_dyno From an outside perspective of what you've said it seems pretty clear why your mum withheld the money. She didn't want to lose out on the financial and physical help you were giving her at the time. As you said she insisted you contribute some of your paycheck to support her at the time. If youd have gone off to collage she'd have lost you as a resource which was making her life easier. 100% selfish and intentional on her part. She held you back because she wanted your help.
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    WesternInspector 1904 Have this exact conversation with your mom. It's not fair you could not concentrate on yourself / your schooling but you had to pitch in on your siblings schooling. You were the brother not the father. Maybe check and see if you are able to use that money another way now?
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    I_Braid_Armpit_Hair OP I have the bonds in hand. They're worth $17k now. I get that that's a lot, but it would have been life changing money when I was 20 or so. Unfortunately $17k would do little to help my current situation. As of now I've framed them as it's proof that my father cared about my education.

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