Montreal Gazette

Inheritanc­e from father causes rift among family

- ANNIE LANE Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com. To find out more about Annie Lane and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

Dear Annie: When my dad passed away several years ago, he left a certificat­e of deposit to me. When it matured, I went to the bank with my mom because she had a CD that matured at the same time. The CD that Dad left me was a payable-on-death CD, with me as the only beneficiar­y, and my dad was the individual owner of the CD.

About a year later, I got a letter from my mom stating, “You need to split up the CD that your dad and I put in your name.” I called my mom and said that the CD was directly from my dad and tried to explain to her that she had nothing to do with it. I told her to talk to the lawyer who handled the estate. My mom then accused me of swindling her and hung up on me.

A short time later, my siblings stopped talking to me, and one called me a thief. I then found out that mom had told my four siblings and others that I had taken her to the bank and swindled her out of a CD. I sent copies of the CD to three of my siblings, and they all know that Mom is wrong, but none of them will confront her. A couple of months ago, I stopped by my mom’s house and asked her what the problem with the family is, and she said it is the CD I took. I again told her to talk to the lawyer. I told her she is the one who created this mess and she can start getting the family back together by admitting that I did not swindle her. She said she would not do that.

Just a couple of weeks ago, my one brother called me a

thief again. I need some guidance on how to deal with this. —Inheritanc­e Headache in Illinois

Dear Inheritanc­e Headache: First, rule out any medical reasons for your mother’s behaviour, as it’s possible she’s genuinely experienci­ng confusion and memory loss. Try uniting with your siblings to encourage Mom to see a doctor for a complete assessment. If that doesn’t turn out any explanatio­ns, enlist the help of a family mediator.

Dear Annie: I have a co-worker who has been on workers’ compensati­on for more than a year. She misses one day a week for physical therapy. The rest of the staff members in the office have to cover her position while she is gone. People in management said they can’t do anything about it. The kicker is that we feel that she is milking this injury and the rest of us are carrying the load. There is a lot of animosity in the office. What can we do? —Frustrated

Dear Frustrated: You can privately reiterate to human resources how this situation is impacting morale. But ultimately, you need to stop focusing so much on your co-worker. The resentment is only hurting you.

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