Dear Carolyn: When my husband and I wrote our wills, we decided to leave our money to various organizations that had touched our lives. We have no children; however, we each have one brother, two nephews and one niece. We are not close to our respective brothers. The only time we see them is on holidays.
It is our belief that each brother is well taken care of and that there should not be a problem with our decision.
The day after we handed the legal package to my brother-in-law, the executor of our wills, we discovered the most scathing emails as to why we left out his family. How could we do this and what about our legacy? WE ARE DEAD TO THEM. No apology or explanation accepted.
Now appearances are kept for Moms sake; as far as we know, my mother-in-law has no idea of the rift.
We feel it is our money and no one can tell us what to do with it. Is this an example of parents wanting the best for their children? Did we hurt them? Where Theres a Will
Carolyn Says: This is an example of entitlement where theres no excuse for it. It is your money and no one can tell you what to do with it (after taxes and estate expenses).
However, its also an example of tone-deafness. Unless your brother-in-law underwent a personality change since the last holiday, you had sufficient knowledge to anticipate his reaction to the will your husband did, at least and to find an executor elsewhere.
Not convinced? Try this: Run a streamlined version of this scenario by friends, such as, A childless couple leave money to charity instead of to affluent siblings. Youre one sibling. How do you respond? Consider whether each friend is an offense-taker or live-and-let-live type. Predict responses accordingly, and see how the results track.
You didnt ask about this, but I believe theres another, more serious misstep in here: If my children ever concealed a feud between them for Moms sake, Id be as heartbroken over that as over the feud itself. Maintaining the facade of happiness where there is none isnt a favor; its emotional fraud. I want a happy family, and if thats too much to ask, then I at least want kids with the courage to tell me the truth.
Peace with Mr. Youre Dead to Us may be out of reach, but integrity is not.
Broken up over break-up
Dear Carolyn: My boyfriend of more than three years broke up with me yesterday. Were in our late 20s. He says he doesnt love me or see us in a long-term romantic relationship, but also says he doesnt really know what love means.
I think hes perfect for me, and I fear hes giving up a mutually fun, caring, supportive relationship because it doesnt feel sparky. I want to be with someone who loves me, but I also think this could be as good as it gets. What can I do? Devastated
Carolyn Says: Grieve, of course, and be patient with yourself as you assemble your post-relationship life.
What I suggest you dont do is perpetuate, for another minute, the myth that someone who just left you is ever as good as it gets. Those worthy of that honor stay.
Washington Post Writers Group
Send email to Carolyn Hax at tellme@washpost.com.


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