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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to think it would be acceptable to do this?

249 replies

foldergirl · 16/12/2011 19:56

This is my first post on mumsnet, I usually lurk in baby names though I don't have dcs yet. I wanted to ask about my lifestyle and life decisions as recently I have got the impression some people think they are wrong.

I am 24 years old and an art graduate. It is 2 years since I graduated and when i did I was never really sure what I wanted to do so I didn't look for a job. I was lucky enough to be able to do this as my boyfriends' parents (he is now my dh) are extremely wealthy. After our graduation we lived in a flat owned by them and they payed all the bills etc as we didn't have jobs. In this time we have got married - planning the wedding was like a full time job in itself!! My dh eventually got a job about 6m ago as a waiter in a golf clubhouse, and has since been made supervisor, but he is finding the long hours hard and is talking about looking for something else.

At the start of the year, my dad was diagnosed with a stage 4 brain tumour. My dh and I moved out of the flat owned by his parents and moved back in with him. I am now his carer and receive carer's allowance. I cook his meals, make sure he takes his medication and drive him to his hospital appointments. I am very close to him and will find it very difficult when he is gone and the prognosis is not good. I couldn't work and look after him, so in a way I think it was a good thing I didn't get a job as I would have had to give it up anyway. My parents have been separated for years though are not divorced and my mum does still care about my dad and helps out with his care occasionally - we both have power of attorney for him.

Now, as I said, my pils are extremely wealthy and have more money than they know what to do with. They have 3 ds's and my dh is the youngest. They have gifted (I think for tax reasons) each ds and dil money towards a house and the amount they stipulated is £400K. Both dh's older brothers have received this amount though pils also insisted that they got a mortgage so that they had a reason to work hard (fil is v hardworking and a self made millionaire). I have seen a house I would like, but the problem is it is £595K. I'm not sure whether dh and I should ask pils for the extra money (I know they have it) as we would not be able to get a mortgage for that amount extra, or whether to approach my dad about selling his house and him moving in with dh and I while I continued to care for him. The only problem is my mum and my brother might have a problem with this. But the house is really beautiful and all I have ever wanted in life is to be a housewife with dcs and a dog and a studio for my art, and this house would enable me to have this - few people get the chance for their dreams to come true and so I think I should take it and ask pil for the money.

But lately, I have got the impression people feel I am lazy, even though I am caring for my dad. I know dh's brothers and my sils all work, but there circumstances are different from mine. I kind of think I deserve this house after giving up my time to look after him in his dying days - it that so bad? AIBU to ask pils for this money?

OP posts:
SnapesMistressofMerriment · 18/12/2011 17:41

Its not her wealth that is the problem, its her immorality, greed and laziness.

olibeansmummy · 18/12/2011 17:56

This is real? I skipped to the last page expecting to find out its a troll and be done with it! Wow, just wow! Have you no self respect?

ThePathanKhansWitch · 18/12/2011 17:59

OP you grasping witch, get thee to fuck!

KeepInMindItsAlmostChristmas · 18/12/2011 18:07

you do not deserve this house, stop free loading off your in laws.

If you want nice things work for them like your FIL does

slavetofilofax · 18/12/2011 18:21

I'd agree with all of the posts telling Op it's immoral to want to sell her Dad's house. There really isn't any other way to look at that. But I do think she could just be misguided about how comfortable her DF would actually be in a new house. There is the chance that she genuinely thinks he would be better off somewhere else, especially as she would be there full time, and she could well have underestimated how traumatic the move could be for him.

But not all of the posts are about that, many are about how out of order she is for wanting more than he PIL's have already said they would give. She could have been advised about the fact that it could do more harm than good without all the insults and troll accusations.

While it is greedy to want more than what is already a generous gift, I can understand why someone who has always been given everything on a silver platter would think that way. If that's how a person has been brought up, they have spent a lifetime thinking that it's ok to take whatever your parents want to give you. Then it's not such a huge leap to think it's ok to want extra. We are all products of the way we have been brought up.

What annoys me is that if someone has been brought up by parents who haven't worked and have lived on benefits, then they go on to do the same, they get sympathy because of the cuts, because they might have to tighten their belts, because there aren't many jobs out there, because it's understandable that they become 'disengaged' and feel that they don't have opportunities.

It seems easy for others to understand that someone who has been brought up in poverty or on a low income might not have the incentive to study hard then work hard starting at the bottom, but when the exact opposite happens to a person, they get attacked for not making the most of the opportunities thay have. Yet no one would have a go at a poor person not making the most of whatever opportunities come their way, because apparantly they are not always strong enough, or it's harder for for them. It's as if it's impossible for people with rich parents to have issues or insecurities or understandable faults.

I just disagree with the double standards.

COCKadoodledooo · 18/12/2011 19:29

Fuck me. You money grabbing bitch. You want your 'dearly loved' dying dad to sell his house so you can have what you want? On top of getting £400k from your inlaws who clearly have more money than sense ?

There's no way you can truly care about your father if that's the way you want to play it, no way at all. If it were my dad I was nursing throughout his dying days, I can honestly say that househunting would be the last thing on my mind.

catwalker · 18/12/2011 23:15

Perhaps, knowing that you and your dh have had £400k handed to you on a plate, your father has left everything to your brother to help balance things out?

ilovesooty · 18/12/2011 23:44

Now if he's done as catwalker suggested that would be a smack in the face for the OP...

newbiedoobiedoo · 18/12/2011 23:54

This is not real. It just isn't. It can't be!

ZacharyQuack · 18/12/2011 23:59

I like that everyone has ignored TheGreatReveal's hinting.

This is such a wind-up.

FoxyRoxy · 19/12/2011 00:00

I think the op is K-Mid...

Biscuit
ThatVikRinA22 · 19/12/2011 00:11

just in case it is real...

OP - have you asked your father what he wants in any of this?

im afraid that you will take the negativity here as jealousy, but you are coming over as spoilt and brattish, callous and uncaring, and completely unlikeable.

newsflash - maybe people think your decisions are wrong because they are wrong.

i hope to god this is a troll...

Moominsarescary · 19/12/2011 01:45

Your poor father

Jacksmania · 19/12/2011 02:48

TheGreatReveal

Stop sitting on your hands, woman. Out with it.

KingsleysMummy · 19/12/2011 03:05

No, it's not acceptable at all. I would recommend you do not follow through on either of your suggestions.

Asking you PIL for more money, on top of the 400,000 gift is shocking and they will see you as a money grabbing, ungrateful person. It could have disastrous consequences on your relationship with them, the same goes for capitalising on what is a shared inheritance with your family. Also, if you did go ahead and sell your fathers house and use the money to buy a big property , you will be legally forced to sell the property once he dies so that you can pay, I think 40% tax, on your fathers money, to the government.

Gapants · 19/12/2011 09:07

the great reveal is this some sort of joke? pretty tasteless if it is. Cancer? High-larious. Xmas Hmm

Happy Christmas op, you have brought most of us great frustration and anger. Nice.

AndYourCarrots · 19/12/2011 09:24

So when's TheGreatReveal going to come back and explain?

How irritating.

peacemoon · 19/12/2011 09:35

What a croc!

ChickensThinkYouCanGetStuffed · 19/12/2011 10:05

OP, please introduce me to your DH I could do me with some of that money.... I should probably warn you that I am very bendy

loopylou6 · 19/12/2011 11:40

No way is this true.

perceptionreality · 19/12/2011 11:42

I said that loopy and the message got deleted so it must be true!

LotteryWinnersOnAcid · 19/12/2011 11:58

Is this a storyline from Made In Chelsea?

What is The Great Reveal? What are you waiting for? You've upset posters who have had to deal with caring for and losing loved ones to cancer by sounding like you are taking this piss. So go on then. Enlighten us.

scarletforya · 19/12/2011 12:00

Of course it's not real. Mumsnet is a trolls paradise. Why does everyone feed them?

DONT FEED THE TROLLS!

BarbarianMum · 19/12/2011 12:02

£195 k sounds an awful lot for 2 years of caring. [fchmm]

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