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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to have expected my parents to buy me a house? Long and boring sorry!

219 replies

JealousAndUnreasonable · 08/02/2014 18:26

Well not 'a' house, my house! Three years ago DH, I and our 3 DCs moved abroad to start a new life after DH was made redundant here. We sold our house and had enough equity for two year's rent and to buy furniture and a car as it was too expensive to take our stuff with us.

DH was on a work visa (went over and got a job before we went) and the plan was after two years we would apply for permanent residence and get a mortgage at which point I could work as well.

Anyway in brief, the house we found to rent was no longer available when we got out there as out paperwork took longer to go through than anticipated (we used a relocation agency which cost £££'s). When we got over there, DH had to start his job straight away and we just could not find another house to rent as there was literally nothing available in our price range except for a house literally right next to a lake which was not ideal for our 2 and 3 year olds!

We met a mortgage broker by chance one day who told us he could get us a mortgage which was something we had not considered as we were not permanent residents. After 4 weeks in a hotel room with 3 DC who were driving me nuts and no school for the eldest as we had no permanent address, we jumped at the chance and put most of our money down on a beautiful family house, mortgage was very affordable on the basis that DH would get paid his contracted salary and it was an upcoming area which the agent assured us would mean the house prices would rise quickly. All good up to now!

Two months later DH's car skidded on ice (very cold winter), he was lucky to be alive but had to take 4 months off work with his injuries with no sick pay as he did not qualify! I could not work due to our visas either. Not eligible for any benefits at all. We were literally living on credit cards and cereal (not the DCs). When DH went back to work, his employers changed his job so his pay was less and as he had no legal protection (not a citizen, new employee) we were buggered. Immediately we put the house on the market as we realised we were not going to cope financially and at least we could take the equity and just rent anything, even a cheap apartment.

House would not sell even when we lowered the price to below what we'd paid for it. The reason being that the government started a scheme to encourage people to build their own houses by releasing cheap land which was much cheaper than buying one that had already been built. I was basically phoning every mortgage company begging them to give us a bigger mortgage so we could release equity that way but again was refused due to residency and DH's lower wage. He could not change jobs due to his visa or take an extra job. We were completely trapped.

I did something I had never done before which was to ask my mother and stepfather for help. They had sold their house some years before and had the money from that in a savings account as they were living abroad in a house provided by my stepdad's job. They were planning on buying a house again in a few years but did not need that money at that time. Knowing this, I asked my mother if they would consider buying our house from us so we could release the equity to top up DH's wage until we were eligible for permanent residence and he could get a better job and so I could work. We would pay them rent (more than the interest they were getting from the bank account) and they would then either sell the house back to us taking any increase in value for themselves or we would try and sell it again giving them the increase in value. We would have got a solicitor to draw it up legally etc. I was not interested in taking money from them, just in salvaging the mess we were in.

They said NO. It was our problem to sort out. We continued for another 6 months hoping to sell, getting further behind with the mortgage, stress causing me panic attacks and eventually handed the house keys to the mortgage company and flew home using credit which we still have not paid off. The bank sold our house a few months later and we got a total of £4k back from a £50k investment (same house is now on the market for $100k than we bought it for!). We have no hope of ever raising enough money for a deposit to buy another house here as we are paying over £1k in rent!

My mother has recently told me that she has bailed my younger sister out to the tune of over £70k in paying off her debts, paying her rent, paying her DCs nursery fees and buying clothes and furniture for her. Sister has split up with the father of her DCs (although he still pays for them and has them on weekends) and she needed their help more than us apparently. She not bothered that my DCs were made homeless and we had to come back to the UK and lose everything.

AIBU to be furious about this?

OP posts:
MaryWestmacott · 08/02/2014 19:03

Oh and while it might be your patents thought you'd made bad decisions so should suffer the consequences, your sister having a lifestyle that requires £70k worth of handouts to fund? How is that not also very bad decisions? The moaning to you about it is also in terribly bad taste, like your feelings just don't register to them.

I'd have it out with your mother, ask her to explain her choice to show favouritism, if she can't, I'd limit contact, life is too short to share it with people who don't think you matter.

paxtecum · 08/02/2014 19:06

OP: I'm sorry all that has happened to you.

It is unfair.

Your DM obviously favours the DCs she had with you step dad and that is horrible.

Life can be very hard.

Best wishes to you.

Caboodle · 08/02/2014 19:08

YANBU - if this were my child I may not have bought your house, but I would, if I could, have sent you money to help you. I cannot imagine treating my 3dcs differently from each other. So sorry to hear how it has gone so far and I hope things improve for you.

Andypipkin · 08/02/2014 19:09

I wondered if your sister was your stepfather's daughter. Yes it does sound horribly unfair. My parents treat me and my siblings very differently and it does affect my relationship with them all. I have come to terms with it more now and do things that suit me and my family much more, before I was always doing things to please my (overbearing and martyrish) mother, so there has been good things to come out of my situation. I think you should concentrate on getting back on your feet with your own little family and try to let things go, your parents seem to have made a bit of a mess themselves if they can longer afford to buy a house, but at least you are free to stay out of it!

expatinscotland · 08/02/2014 19:11

If she's like that then, end contact with her. If my mother treated me like that, I'd have gone my separate way long ago.

Inertia · 08/02/2014 19:11

Sounds very short sighted of them — presumably if they'd bought your house in Canada you could have stayed, supported their application, and offered them a home.

You can't expect your parents to bail you out to the point of buying a house, but it does seem very unfair that they can give one of their children endless support, free childcare and tend of thousands of pounds yet offer you no help.

Logg1e · 08/02/2014 19:11

You are being unreasonable. It's their money.

SantasLittleMonkeyButler · 08/02/2014 19:12

TBH, I would be jealous & a little pissed off. Not that they wouldn't lend the money to me - although, as you say they were planning to move there themselves, it actually could have helped them as well as you - BUT that they then helped your sister out to the tune of £70k.

Maybe they thought that your sister had no-one else, as her DP had left, and felt obliged to help her rather than you (as you, in their eyes, had a DH to 'look after' you). That is fair enough, but £70k is a lot of help.

YABU to have expected them to part with that much money BUT I would probably feel the way you do too, if I'm being totally honest!

mercibucket · 08/02/2014 19:13

i am not surprised you feel jealous and sad faced with blatant favouritism like that Sad

canweseethebunnies · 08/02/2014 19:15

I think you are getting a hard time and YANBU. You didn't ask for a bail out, you offered a sensible business proposition that would have helped you out after a run of bad luck, and would have also benefited them financially as well as giving them a better chance of emigrating.

Was there a reason they didn't want their capital tied up?

Calloh · 08/02/2014 19:15

That's a rubbish situation to be in. I think you know YABU for all the reasons people have said above but I do totally understand why it smarts like hell.

43percentburnt · 08/02/2014 19:20

It's a terrible position to be in bt maybe your family thought they would be throwing good money after bad. Did your husband, as the main earner, not have sickness insurance or PHI?

bluebell234 · 08/02/2014 19:20

are you sure they gave the money to her?
maybe they just saying like that so you wont ask for help from them.

LEMmingaround · 08/02/2014 19:23

Oh gosh, you poor thing - that must be really hurtful for you :( I have two DDs, DD1 from a previous relationship, 15 years difference between them - whatever we have to leave them when we go, will be shared equally. If one girl was set up in their own home and the other struggling, that might skew things, but it would have nothing to do with one of the girls being DPs biological daughter. Really shitty of your mum, really shitty - and short sighted too.

Creamycoolerwithcream · 08/02/2014 19:23

YABU.
I would not spend hundreds of thousands or whatever on a house for my son overseas on a country I know little about. It's just too risky.
I'm very sorry to hear of your misfortune but I think you rushed to soon into buying in Canada.

Andypipkin · 08/02/2014 19:28

LEM, I understand what you are saying about providing more help where needed. I think my own mother thinks she is doing this with my sister. I was a SAHM for many years whereas my sister had to work, however what my mum never seemed to notice was all the sacrifices I made to stay home, whereas my sister constantly buys herself designer clothes, goes out all the time, has 4 holidays a year and still gets a €350000 home thrown at her from my parents. Oh dear! I said I was over it Grin sorry OP, back to your thread!

ohfourfoxache · 08/02/2014 19:29

Op was left living with her family in a hotel - would you honestly not offer your son a loan to avoid that happening Creamy?

quietlysuggests · 08/02/2014 19:30

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

candycoatedwaterdrops · 08/02/2014 19:30

YABU but I understand why you feel the way you do. It sounds like it's less about the money and more about them favouring your sister.

candycoatedwaterdrops · 08/02/2014 19:32

All of you calling the OP 'entitled' and whatnot, I wonder how you'd feel if you were up shit creek without a paddle and your parents had given £70K to your other sibling.

TwinkleSparkleBling · 08/02/2014 19:34

I'd be really hurt by this too OP, I think most people would in honesty. Yes, it's their money to do as they wish but treating siblings so differently, especially given what you said about any inheritance, has to impact negatively.

I would have to ask them why they treated you differently, otherwise it would eat away at me. I don't like confrontation but I would want to understand their actions.

Creamycoolerwithcream · 08/02/2014 19:37

Ohfour, yes I definitely would offer a loan . I wouldn't buy him a home. If it went belly up my DH and I would be screwed and lose money we have sent a life time working for. Buying overseas is so risky, new laws, inheritance rules, currency changes etc.

Logg1e · 08/02/2014 19:40

Candy some people prefer to make their own way. I value my independence and don't envy my partner's siblings the financial handouts of his parents (and at least one has received more than £70k for a house the parents own and they live in).

Fairylea · 08/02/2014 19:40

Yanbu considering the whole dynamics of giving your sister the money and also the inheritance.

I don't think any parent should feel obliged to give their dc money however if they give one child financial support then it is only reasonable that should extend to all their dc.

Dh has the same issues with his family and in particular his sister who his parents always help out financially whereas last year our roof needed replacing and we were virtually on the breadline and they didn't even offer to put something towards our food shop for the dc! (In comparison sil had her holiday paid for and a new TV and ipad). It is not fair at all. If you don't want to help your dc financially then don't help any.

I feel for you. I hope things get better for you from now on. If I was your mum I would not have hesitated to help.

scottishmummy · 08/02/2014 19:41

You can't change past,can't change the present
You can reflect on the feelings parents evoked.the sibling relationship.parental relationship
And you take control back,by seeing it is just what it is.dont be defined by this

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