Quote from: Rain on November 04, 2014, 01:48:20 AM
Oh, sunkitten.
This is so much you are dealing with. An incredible amount.
I think your counselor is saying your emotional health is what is most important. One can be in the right, and still be on the losing end.
I've had some times I have had to cut some serious losses and move on. Likely, we all have. Yours is an extreme example. Dying people can will entire fortunes to a dog, and ignore caretakers and family, like that hotel woman some years ago...it's their right, fair or not. It is just is the way it goes.
The timber company. Personally, I have seen what the land looks like after a timber company stripped what they wanted, abandoned equipment on the land left for the land owner to deal with. The land I saw looked like a bomb hit it, I never expected to be so shocked. Potentially, water runoff issues afterwards.
I hope things clear up soon for you, sunkitten.
Thanks, Rain.
I know dying people can do what they want with their money, but (besides the NPD/ASPD) my father was also on some pretty strong medications for pain while he was in the nursing home, medications which he was not used to receiving long-term. And he maintained right up until his death, even after he changed his financial POA, that I was "all he had" and that he would be leaving everything to me. There is legal precedent here, in my country, where unfair distribution of assets between *siblings* has been overturned by the court and this woman is not even a member of my family except by marriage of her mother.
My father knew I dealt/deal with chronic pain and spinal deformity and that this would inevitably lead to a point where I could no longer work full-time. There are tons of medical records which support this, and combined with my lack of assets compared to those of my uncle's younger stepdaughter, plus the fact that she had virtually nothing to do with him until the last seventeen months of his life, and other evidence on top of all of that, most courts I think would take it all into consideration.
I've been seeing this counselor since 2007, on and off, and was seeing her at the time my father made these changes (at least the ones I knew about at the time). She seems to think that if I just go to social services they'll get me all set up with an affordable place to live right away, but they won't -- due to that long waiting list. I'm sure she is concerned with my emotional health, but having to leave behind all of my possessions and my beloved cats and live on the street until a unit opens up in five years isn't exactly great for my emotional health either. I lose the annuity with no fixed address.