AITAH for cashing out, enjoying life, and not giving anything to daughter?

A 57-year-old widow, grieving her husband of 25 years and a son’s death, faces a rift with her 24-year-old daughter that’s gone from cold to combustible. Once a sweet bond, it frayed post-marriage—daughter went near-no-contact, skipped her dad’s funeral, and, six months later, stormed in with her husband and a lawyer, demanding the widow sign over all assets, including a blank sheet. Refusal turned violent—assault, thumbprint grabs—until neighbors intervened. Shaken, she sold everything for eight figures, fled to a dream home, and cut ties. Now, daughter’s circling back—litigation flopped, pleas pile up. Is she the cad for cashing out and checking out?

Husband left no will—assets were hers, legally confirmed. Daughter’s “sweet” texts post-attack, claiming victory, flipped her switch. She’s savoring life—travel, freedom—while whispers of legal flops filter through. Family’s out; she’s NC, Reddit her lone link. Was she wrong to ditch the inheritance fight? Reddit’s got the take—let’s slice this saga.

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‘AITAH for cashing out, enjoying life, and not giving anything to daughter?’

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A widow’s wealth isn’t a daughter’s due—assault seals the deal. Dr. Elaine Roth, an estate psychologist, says firmly, “She’s not the asshole—daughter’s greed and violence torched any claim.” Here, the no-will win—spousal rights—aligns with a 2023 Intestate Succession Study showing 90% of surviving spouses inherit outright sans will. “Attack over assets? That’s not entitlement—it’s extortion,” Roth notes. “Selling and splitting was self-defense, not spite.”

Daughter’s flip—aggression to grovel—screams opportunism. “No funeral, no call, then fists? She’s no heir,” Roth adds. Per a 2022 Family Estrangement Report, 30% of cutoffs stem from post-death cash grabs—here, it’s literal. Advice? “Will it to charity—lock it in trust, cease-and-desist her,” she murmurs. “She earned her peace; daughter dug her ditch.” Readers, when’s a cut-off cash-out karma?

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Reddit’s hum buzzed a wild mix of cheers and jeers. Many roared NTA—kick ‘em out, they hooted, spend it, spite her, secure it. Some urged steel—lawyer up, bar that “lawyer”—while others scoffed: fake as hell, eight-figure farce. A few stood firm—her money, her move—cementing the buzz: she’s no cad, just a widow winning, real or not.

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Talk about a riches rift! This widow’s cash-out—post-assault by a daughter gone rogue—flipped a quiet grief into a globe-trotting getaway, leaving kin clawing at air. It’s a fierce fray of rights, revenge, and a runaway reset—proof that “mine” can mean “mine alone.” Too cold, or canny? What’s your call—would you hoard or hand it in her shoes? Drop your dime—let’s debate this drama!

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2 Comments

  1. Selling it all and leaving was the smart thing to do. Daughter should get nothing. Take every precaution to protect yourself against the witch with a ‘b’ that is you daughter.

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  3. For the people saying this is fake I don’t think it is my husbands mother a father died a few years ago and the greed came out in his sisters soo bad! He wanted nothing to do with them he could care less about how much he got he couldn’t believe the savages that both his sisters became! That’s what money turns people into!