by Sixstrings » Fri 25 Feb 2011, 16:44:44
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbare', 'S')ixStrings--I am so sorry to hear about your grandfather's will. It seems odd that the sole beneficiary, your uncle, is also the executor? My mother just died and there hasn't been any difficulty. It's pretty straightforward. Nobody was forgotten, no hard feelings. Everything is cool. All of us kids are very lucky.
Well, I'm over it.
Complaining about this is tacky, I realize. I was only bothered because there was enough to go around and do the right thing.
Then there's the rejection factor. Uncle's letter made it more than clear that's what this is, rejection as family. I actually appreciate his honesty. He could have smoothed it over and just said these were his dad's wishes, or said something like he was very close to him so this is what his dad wanted. But nope, he confirmed that it means what I thought it did and so there's closure there, that helps.
My brother has made some amends. Uncle is fixing the house up to sell it and gave my brother some mementos. My sister is getting one of Grandpa's bibles. God bless him but Grandpa was tight.. funny story, he always kept like five bibles around the house. My sister once asked if she could have one of the family bibles for her own home. He said no. So that gives you an idea how things were with him, he wouldn't even part with a bible. So now she gets that same bible he didn't want to give her fifteen years ago.
So anyhow my brother did get permission to get one of my grandmother's afghan quilts for me. It's been in the closet since she made it in the early 70's, looks brand new. I'm not saying peep about anything at this point, but personally I don't even feel like I want it now.
Bottom line.. my posts in this thread are tacky, speaking ill of the deceased is very tacky, and of course nobody should *expect* to get anything from anybody anyway. All I can say is that a lot of emotions come up at a time like this. Long running family issues, it's complicated.
One thing I can feel very good about is that I never asked my grandfather for anything. When I spent time with him he never had to worry about that. When I'd cook for him, he was very grateful -- I'm glad I made the trips up there as an adult, otherwise I wouldn't have those memories.