I’m 61, married for the second time, and I’ve never had kids of my own—that was always by choice. My husband has two adult children from his first marriage, they’re 29 and 32. We’re civil, but that’s about it. I’ve been part of their lives for 15 years now, but I never tried to step into a mother role. They didn’t want that, and I wasn’t about to force it.

Recently, I updated my will. I decided to leave the majority of my estate to my niece—my late sister’s daughter. She’s 24, calls me every week just to check in, never forgets my birthday, and once even flew across the country just to help me recover after surgery. To me, she feels like my own.
My stepkids eventually found out about this—not from me, but because my husband let it slip during dinner without really thinking. And the fallout was immediate.
“You’re cutting us out?”
“You’ve been in our lives for over a decade!”
“You’re punishing us for not being close?”

No. I’m not cutting them out, and I’m not punishing anyone. I’m simply not going to reward people who have kept me at arm’s length for the past 15 years.
It’s not as though I left them nothing. Each of them will receive a set amount. But I refuse to be guilt-tripped into dividing my life’s work with people who only seem to remember I exist once a year—at Christmas.
My husband tried to play the role of peacemaker, but I could tell it unsettled him. Later that night, he asked me gently if I’d consider “adjusting things for the sake of harmony.”
I told him no. And that’s when he surprised me. He said, “Then I need to do the same.”

The following week, he changed his will—leaving everything to his kids. I won’t lie, that stung.
But here’s the spicy part: I went back to my lawyer and added a single line to mine—“Any inheritance received by [my niece] is to be protected from claims by surviving spouses.”
So if this turns into a fight after I’m gone, they’ll lose. Twice.
Source: brightside.me