I got better. Fast. Then I called a family meeting at the nursing home, with my lawyer present. At first, I read the will they expected—everything divided equally. They relaxed.
Then I told them to read the real will.
Each of my kids and grandkids got one dollar. The rest? Donated to charity and the nursing home’s support fund. I sold the house, cashed out the savings. Their faces fell.
“You talked about my funeral like a brunch plan,” I told them. “Did it ever occur to you I might not be ready to die?”
Now I’m traveling—Grand Canyon first, then Paris. I kept enough to live fully, the way Harold and I always dreamed but never could. I’m not bitter. I just finally chose me.
This isn’t about revenge. It’s about respect. Teach your kids that love isn’t measured in inheritance—and that a kind heart doesn’t mean a weak one.