News3 mins ago
Today I Am Totally Sickened....
57 Answers
As some know I live in a cul-de-sac. The road that runs across the top has many houses, from my kitchen window I can see four of them. In one lives a man of about 60 ish. Everyday sometimes lunch time sometimes early evening he gets the bus into town for his main meal. Last night he came home by taxi. At about 10pm I saw the blue lights of the ambulance. This morning 5 cars turned up and they were literally fighting in the street over his stuff. I have never seen one of these people before. He never had any visitors and he never spoke of any family. Turns out he died during the night. Sometimes I'm glad I have no family. RIP Ronnie.
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No best answer has yet been selected by Jeza. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sorry too JJ, just a bit sensitive about this 'tis all and very tired today. It's really difficult to get across on a 'thread' just how important my parents are to me and how little their 'money' matters in comparison to them actually being alive for many years to come and enjoying life.
I just feel really sorry for Jeza's neighbour and can't understand why family, if they wanted nothing to do with him, would suddenly care so much about his physical belongings afterwards. The mind boggles.
Anyway, night all, see you on the GMEB tomorrow JJ x
I just feel really sorry for Jeza's neighbour and can't understand why family, if they wanted nothing to do with him, would suddenly care so much about his physical belongings afterwards. The mind boggles.
Anyway, night all, see you on the GMEB tomorrow JJ x
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A sorry tale, Jeza.
Kind of self-fulfilling though. They never visit him, so he doesn't feel kindly disposed to them, so he doesn't bother to make out a will, so it ends up being a fight over who gets what. That is -precisely- why wills were invented.
I imagine that the people doing the shouting and fighting do not visit one another, either. They have been forced into close proximity by Ronnie's death and their existing rivalries are only magnified by having property to squabble over.
With regard to visiting, it's a no win situation. Regular visits to a particularly elderly relative can appear equally vulture-like, to the casual observer. So I dare say some people hold back to avoid this. The pattern of not visiting regulary can start when you get your own life established, after all. Especially if long distances are involved.
Kind of self-fulfilling though. They never visit him, so he doesn't feel kindly disposed to them, so he doesn't bother to make out a will, so it ends up being a fight over who gets what. That is -precisely- why wills were invented.
I imagine that the people doing the shouting and fighting do not visit one another, either. They have been forced into close proximity by Ronnie's death and their existing rivalries are only magnified by having property to squabble over.
With regard to visiting, it's a no win situation. Regular visits to a particularly elderly relative can appear equally vulture-like, to the casual observer. So I dare say some people hold back to avoid this. The pattern of not visiting regulary can start when you get your own life established, after all. Especially if long distances are involved.
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