South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Spouse feels left out of in-law’s bequest

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy said. Thank you. Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: My husband died young. He was one of three siblings.

I made sure to visit and call my late husband’s parents regularly. I consider them family. My own father died when I was young, so my fatherin-law was my “Pop-pop.”

My mother-in-law died six years ago, but my father-in-law and I continued to call each other on Sundays.

My adult children also kept in touch with him.

Sadly, my father-inlaw, well into his 90s, died recently.

His eldest child was the executor and said that his dad had recently changed his will, giving one third of his estate to each of his two remaining children and then dividing the remaining third among all of the grandchild­ren (there are seven, two of them are my children).

I didn’t expect to receive anything from the estate, although a note acknowledg­ing our relationsh­ip sure would have meant a lot.

My father-in-law had every right to determine how to bequeath his money, but I am still having trouble with how this played out.

I feel as though my husband’s life was erased from the story and that my kids ended up being punished (again) by their dad’s early death.

I want to make sure my daughter-in-law and son-in-law feel valued when I die.

My current will divides my estate between my two children. Is there something more I should do to ensure my son-in-law and daughter-in-law know how much I loved and valued both of them?

What would be a good way to acknowledg­e that I appreciate them? Should I write those notes now?

— Upset

Dear Upset: It would have been judicious for your father-in-law to divide his estate into three equal sibling portions, with your late husband’s portion given to your children, but he didn’t do that. He cut out your husband and descendant­s, but you seem to be reacting mainly to the fact that you feel cut out.

Yes, a note to be passed along to you would have been thoughtful, but if you’d received it, you might have felt: “My late husband was ignored, and all I got was a note?!”

My point is that the reward you received — the legacy — was in the relationsh­ip itself. It was gracious for you to keep in such close touch with your late husband’s folks.

Let your own kids’ spouses know that you treasure their relationsh­ip.

Write these notes now — and send them now! Leave these in-laws something special in your will.

Dear Amy: I’ve become friendly with a married couple (both women) who recently started attending our Protestant church. They chose our church because of its progressiv­e and inclusive attitude toward LGBTQ people.

This couple has decided to spearhead a Christmas campaign asking fellow congregant­s to donate gifts through a national charity run by an evangelist whose anti-gay stance is common knowledge.

Members of our church have participat­ed in this for several years, but I decided (quietly) that I would direct my Christmas charity elsewhere and choose not to donate.

This is the first year that the campaign has been led by a gay couple, and I wonder if they realize that the leader of the national charity believes that gay people are “godless sinners.”

Should I tell them?

— Torn

Dear Torn: You’ve been a quiet witness to this annual appeal.

You should not expect a gay couple to care more about this than you do.

If you don’t believe that your particular congregati­on should endorse and participat­e in this campaign because of the discrimina­tory beliefs of its founder, you should take your concerns to your church’s governing body, not to these individual­s.

Dear Amy: You ran a question from and overwhelme­d preacher’s daughter, including an elaborate answer from a pastor on how to frame her choice to pull back from church activities.

This bothered me! She should tell her father the truth, not develop a fanciful explanatio­n for the fact that she is exhausted and needs to stop!

— A Preacher’s Kid

Dear Preacher’s Kid: Well

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