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Sounds grabby but can't seem to get past it

168 replies

LotsOfNothing · 21/02/2026 22:16

This is long, sorry. And it will sound grabby to many and it sort of is, but I am really struggling to get past it. It is keeping me awake at night and making me feel sick.

I am married with 2 DC (older teens) I have no other living family. I was the only child of an only child (mum) and my dad's few relatives lived on the other side of the world, were not particularly interested and are now also deceased.

My lovely dad worked his whole life (35 years) for a wealthy married childless couple who were my godparents (as a pair) - so the nearest things I had to relatives as a child. They were quite engaged with me as a child but less interested when I got a bit older - 14/15. My dad had many opportunities to leave and earn a lot more money but he was too very loyal, and grateful for the job opportunity they had given him when he first arrived in the UK in the 70s. So he stayed with them and took his very modest weekly wage whilst their business grew into a multi million pound success. The day he retired they gave him nothing. Not a penny, but promised that I would be looked after. I was the centre of his world so he was happy with that.

After my parents died I made an extra effort to keep in touch with my godparents who had no relatives and few friends, and did a lot for them, especially during Covid - but also just popping round for tea, picking up shopping etc. I genuinely did this not with any expectation but because I missed my parents so much and enjoyed being around 'nearly' family who knew them well and could chat and help keep the memories alive.

In the meantime, my marriage started to deteriorate and became quite abusive (verbally not physically) with H often losing his temper and being controlling - hiding my keys/phone for example, breaking my things, getting up in my face and calling me names. Not in front of DC - but several times a week. I started to lose myself and lost my confidence and then lost my job so felt completely trapped. Financially, emotionally and physically.

Even though I didn't consciously think it, a bit of me was waiting for Godparents to step in and help me - either financially or emotionally, but even though Godfather would ask if I needed anything, it was never in a way that you could say actually say "yes" and honestly.... a bit of me kept thinking 'just hold on' - he made a promise, you'll be ok.

Godmother died and I spent more time checking on Godfather, but he died close behind her last year. I was sat with him the day he died and promised to take his cat (which I did).

Six months later, probate was sorted and his estate was worth £17.5 million. He left £1million to his lovely housekeeper who had been with him 25 years and the rest to various animal charities. I got nothing.

I know I shouldn't have expected something, but I did. I thought it was my ticket out of my horrible situation - my escape - and I can't get over how let down I feel. It's like my one chance was taken away. It wasn't really, it just wasn't ever there. I am also so gutted for my dad (who obviously doesn't know that the promise wasn't kept) but he so believed I would be helped and it makes me so angry that they lied to him. I have to drive past some of the beautiful houses that my godparents owned most days - there are at least seven in my area - and I just can't help feel bitter and let down knowing that I am stuck with no financial means to leave in a horrible marriage, when a small fraction of his wealth could have made all the difference.

I should just move on - nobody is entitled to anything, i know that but I feel like my last bit of fight is gone. I really want to be strong, to move on but I feel like it's almost becoming like an intrusive thought - the fact of being disappointed. I think I was counting on it more than I was prepared to admit to myself and just feel utterly crushed that I haven't been 'rescued'.

OP posts:
HardworkSendHelp · 21/02/2026 22:57

It’s not grabby OP. It is just awful they did that to you. I am so sorry. I had a relative who had no children. She would tell her sister that she would look after her children. Heard her spout the same thing time and time again. She was worth millions and left one of the nieces who really could have used money her crappy ornaments. I would have a ceremony of smashing them as this particular niece was so good to her. I felt so sorry for her

fivetriangulartrees · 21/02/2026 22:59

I'm so sorry. It doesn't sound grabby to me, it sounds like a natural reaction. They were nearly your family and they promised to look after you, but they didn't, so maybe you're not so sure of the relationship after all? And to have lost the last remaining link to your parents. AND to feel trapped in a horrible situation when it seemed completely avoidable. It's not about being grabby, it's about complex emotions and also the practical obstacles you're facing. Of course you're disappointed. I don't have a solution but I can empathise.

ChocolateCinderToffee · 21/02/2026 23:04

It’s awful they paid your dad so little.

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ExitPursuedByABare · 21/02/2026 23:08

You don’t sound grabby. They sound mean spirited. I’m sorry you are in this situation.

Caitl995 · 21/02/2026 23:10

Cunts! Sorry OP

FasterMichelin · 21/02/2026 23:11

I just can’t understand them. They could so very easily have left you £500k whilst still donating so much to charity. Thats awful of them.

IamtheDevilsAvocado · 21/02/2026 23:37

How very shitty of them... You're right no one deserves an inheritance... But when it has been promised??

They went against their promise and let you and your family down badly.

I'm sorry

IfThen · 21/02/2026 23:52

OP, the only behaviour you can control here is yours. Your father made the choice to stay with these people for his whole working life for poor remuneration. You made the choice to treat them as parent figures, but not to ask them for help when you needed it.

Ilovelurchers · 21/02/2026 23:55

Totally natural to feel like this, OP.

I have an elderly childless cousin I do a lot for. I know I am named as her executor, but I have no idea whether I actually inherit anything in her will. I help her out of love and a sense of duty, but I will be honest now and say that if she leaves me nothing, I will be deeply hurt and disappointed.

I assume that there is absolutely no possibility that this was not your godfather's most recent will? That there might be another one that hasn't been found yet?

I know I am grasping at straws here - I am sure you will have considered this, of course you will - it just seems so strange that he would have promised your father he would remember you in his will, and to go directly against this promise, if there has been no argument with you. Was he otherwise a cruel and deceitful man, that you know of? Or could anybody have exerted pressure to stop him leaving you this money?

Letsformanallegiance · 21/02/2026 23:56

Not grabby at all. I’d have been extremely hurt by this. It wouldn’t have made any difference to them once they passed but would have been a totally life changing act of kindness for you. I’d be devastated by this. So heartless. I can only gather there must have been some kind of (hidden) bad blood or point they wanted to make? Very mean spirited.

MeganM3 · 21/02/2026 23:58

I’m not sure what you could or should have done differently, if anything.
I don’t think you have anything to regret.
They were playing you, and your parents, and left you nothing on purpose. They took your help and kindness knowing full well you weren’t in their will.

Try to move on.

JLou08 · 22/02/2026 00:01

I can understand your disappointment. I do wonder if you would have actually left H with the money and it's probably worth you considering that too. How financially dependant on him are you? Do you work? Do you have debts? If you really want to leave, I'm sure there will be a way, maybe not an easy way but it would be doable. Is there a fear of leaving H because you don't have family?
Did your godparents know what he was like? Maybe they thought you wouldn't leave and didn't want him having the money.

LotsOfNothing · 22/02/2026 00:07

Thank you all for being so kind. I was expecting a lot of 'nobody has the right to an inheritance' which is true. A couple of points made have really resonated. I am angry with myself for not saying, 'actually yes, there is something you could help with' and just having blind faith. And yes, I am bitter that the donkey sanctuary would have been just as happy with £4.5 million as it would with £5million and yet the difference would have changed my whole life.

It was a recent will - less than two years old.

Both godparents were really really fond of my dad and always spoke highly of him. My dad and Godfather spent a lot of time together day to day - they were good friends. They came to his funeral and were visibly upset. I know this sounds SO entitled but I think I am actually a bit shocked.

What I really want is to not feel bitter, betrayed, angry for my dad, let down etc about the money because it's really got into my head and it's stopping me find any energy to do anything about the horrible situation I am in at home. I have been called all sorts of names today and I am still struggling to find a job - I honestly feel like I am on the floor.

OP posts:
LotsOfNothing · 22/02/2026 00:10

JLou08 · 22/02/2026 00:01

I can understand your disappointment. I do wonder if you would have actually left H with the money and it's probably worth you considering that too. How financially dependant on him are you? Do you work? Do you have debts? If you really want to leave, I'm sure there will be a way, maybe not an easy way but it would be doable. Is there a fear of leaving H because you don't have family?
Did your godparents know what he was like? Maybe they thought you wouldn't leave and didn't want him having the money.

I would definitely have left. I was almost (I now realise) counting on it. I have no savings, nothing. Being out of work for so long has exhausted anything I had. They had no idea what he is like - it was not about him.

Part of my difficulty in leaving is the no family bit. There isn't a sister/mum/someone to go and stay with or to even help me leave safely, I'd literally be walking out of my home with nothing and nowhere to go. I'd also be dealing with an angry person who would not make things easy or attempt to be amicable in any way.

OP posts:
Crikeyalmighty · 22/02/2026 00:10

My grandmother many years ago left my mother majority of her estate, left £80,000 to various charity’s and left me £5,000 - I did an awful lot for them when I was younger and whilst it was done with no expectation whatsoever I was somewhat hurt that she felt charitys deserved it more than myself as I was newly divorced at the time in my late 20s and struggling financially - she probably presumed my mum would leave most to me but mum remarried a much younger guy and it didn’t work out like that - like sadly isn’t always fair OP

one thing I’ve learnt in life is that an awful lot of people who are very well off in business ( and we have a business) aren’t always lovely benevolent people - we work in entertainment and there are people who are well off in this business simply because it can be highly paid at the right level and with success, but at the business end of things rather than creative end of things, there are many downright shysters, who have shafted people , defrauded people and really don’t care either - some very well off people simply see the rest of us as useful idiots and your own struggles and worries are really not theirs to deal with - it’s harsh, but its a fact

Crikeyalmighty · 22/02/2026 00:11

LotsOfNothing · 22/02/2026 00:10

I would definitely have left. I was almost (I now realise) counting on it. I have no savings, nothing. Being out of work for so long has exhausted anything I had. They had no idea what he is like - it was not about him.

Part of my difficulty in leaving is the no family bit. There isn't a sister/mum/someone to go and stay with or to even help me leave safely, I'd literally be walking out of my home with nothing and nowhere to go. I'd also be dealing with an angry person who would not make things easy or attempt to be amicable in any way.

Edited

I understand this too - I’m in a similar place

misssunshine4040 · 22/02/2026 03:26

I’m so sorry for your situation. You are not in the slightest grabby.

They are awful people who have taken you and your family for granted. Why did the house keeper get £1million and not their god child?
You are right to feel the emotions you do.

Please channel this into leaving your abusive husband. I know you are alone and you are scared for the future but you can do it and give yourself the life you deserve.
Contact women’s aid and seek advice and support to get out.

NeverTeaTea · 22/02/2026 03:37

What dreadful people. I am not surprised you are hurt.

Stephaneey · 22/02/2026 03:46

I really feel for you!
I know this might sound harsh but I don’t understand when people leave so much money to charity (unless a small/local one)
A family friend left £50,000 to a ‘national charity’ it wouldn’t even be a drop in the ocean to them, but imagine the difference that could make to one person’s life.

Marchitectmummy · 22/02/2026 04:57

I'm a bit confused why people who left their money to charity and their housekeeper are considered to be horrible / dreadful blah blah blah.

My view is different to others, their long relationship was with your dad, they appear to have been kind to you in your life but they inherited you through their relationship with your father. Your father died and you chose to make them your surrogate parents, they don't sound like they chose to maintain a relationship with you, you chose to do so with them and although your acts are kind they are also self serving. If they had a housekeeper then shopping etc would have been done by them if you hadn't stepped in. You almost sound like you have forged this relationship to enable you to leave your husband.

The other point I was going to make is I can't understand the economics of this is in the UK. £1.75m is not a huge amount of money to have multiple houses, a 'house keeper', a successful business. It's a really small amount in that context.

Something in the whole story isn't adding up.

NewbieSM · 22/02/2026 05:09

Um sorry I’m going against the grain that yeah you are being unreasonable, these people were not your family and owed you nothing. The fact that you didn’t tell the about your struggles in your marriage makes your position even more unreasonable. How were they to know they were expected to financially provide for another unrelated adult when you didn’t say you needed help? Maybe try to help yourself as the world doesn’t owe you anything unfortunately.

SouthernNights59 · 22/02/2026 05:17

I'm normally the first to say people can leave their money to whoever they wish, but in this instance I think they have been awful. They were your godparents, they could have at least made some provision for you in light of having no children themselves. I can't believe they could be so mean and can fully understand why you feel bitter.

ThatFairy · 22/02/2026 05:19

I think your feelings are valid. You must feel so let down, only to then get the sense that they didn't really care about you, after all you did for them. I actually think they are terrible for this. What you have to do is understand you may be on your own with no money, but you have to get out of that relationship, and you will. Believe me, because I have been in your shoes, and i had nothing and I got out. Life hasn't been easy, but at least I have my peace and confidence back. Absolutely terrible. Animal charities while important, you should have been more so to them, or at least considered. I'm so sorry. X.

SouthernNights59 · 22/02/2026 05:23

NewbieSM · 22/02/2026 05:09

Um sorry I’m going against the grain that yeah you are being unreasonable, these people were not your family and owed you nothing. The fact that you didn’t tell the about your struggles in your marriage makes your position even more unreasonable. How were they to know they were expected to financially provide for another unrelated adult when you didn’t say you needed help? Maybe try to help yourself as the world doesn’t owe you anything unfortunately.

Did you miss the bit where they were OP's godparents, and that a sizeable sum was left to a housekeeper, who presumably was paid to do the job? I don't have children, and not a lot of money to leave, but if I had godchildren they would be at the forefront of my will. My own childless godfather left me a third of his estate.

Poppins2016 · 22/02/2026 05:33

Marchitectmummy · 22/02/2026 04:57

I'm a bit confused why people who left their money to charity and their housekeeper are considered to be horrible / dreadful blah blah blah.

My view is different to others, their long relationship was with your dad, they appear to have been kind to you in your life but they inherited you through their relationship with your father. Your father died and you chose to make them your surrogate parents, they don't sound like they chose to maintain a relationship with you, you chose to do so with them and although your acts are kind they are also self serving. If they had a housekeeper then shopping etc would have been done by them if you hadn't stepped in. You almost sound like you have forged this relationship to enable you to leave your husband.

The other point I was going to make is I can't understand the economics of this is in the UK. £1.75m is not a huge amount of money to have multiple houses, a 'house keeper', a successful business. It's a really small amount in that context.

Something in the whole story isn't adding up.

OP said 17.5 million (you're right, 1.75 million wouldn't make sense!).

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