I’m 61, married for the second time, no kids of my own by choice. My husband has two adult children from his first marriage—29 and 32. We’re civil. I’ve been around 15 years, but I never played mom. They didn’t want that, and I didn’t force it.
Recently, I updated my will. I left the majority of my estate to my niece—my late sister’s daughter. She’s 24, checks in weekly, remembers my birthday, and once flew cross-country just to help me after surgery. She feels like mine.
My stepkids found out—not from me, but because my husband mentioned it at dinner without thinking. And let me tell you, the fallout was immediate.
“You’re cutting us out?”
“You’ve been in our lives for over a decade!”
“You’re punishing us for not being close?”
No. I’m just not rewarding people who kept me at arm’s length for 15 years.
It’s not like I left them nothing. They’re each getting a set amount. But I won’t be guilted into splitting my life’s work with people who only remember I exist at Christmas.
My husband tried to stay neutral, but I could see it bothered him. Later that night, he asked me quietly if I’d consider “adjusting things for the sake of harmony.”
I said no. And that’s when he surprised me. He said, “Then I need to do the same.”
He changed his will the next week—to leave everything to his kids. It stung. I won’t lie.
But here’s the spicy part: I went back to my lawyer and added one line to mine—”Any inheritance received by [my niece] is to be protected from claims by surviving spouses.”
If this turns into a fight after I’m gone, they’ll lose. Twice.”
Thank you for your letter!