Dear Prudence,
My husband and his parents are three of the most genuinely kind people I know, and I’m very luckily to call them family. They are, however, terrible at having frank conversations. They avoid tough subjects, or circle around them so broadly that we’re often halfway into a conversation before I figure out what they’re actually trying to talk to me about. My husband has learned to be franker and more direct with me, but has not gotten there with his parents. Mostly this is fine, though I think it will be more of a problem as his parents age.
The thing that really worries me right now is a family home that my in-laws purchased from other family members and now live in. It’s in a very hot real estate market with high property taxes, and the only thing my husband’s family will say about the fate of this house when my in-laws pass away is it will be “given to” my husband and his siblings. We live across the country, also in an expensive housing market, and couldn’t afford property taxes and maintenance on this house in addition to our own. My other siblings-in-law also couldn’t afford this, and none of them live near this house (or even in the same state). The house is very sentimental to my husband and his family, and he would be devastated if it was sold.
I keep bringing up to him that I think he and his parents and siblings need to sit down and have a conversation about the future of this house and he agrees, but just doesn’t do it. I’ve been bugging him for two years now. I’ve outlined for him how messy things could get if his parents pass away or move into assisted living with no plan for how four adults with modest incomes who love each other but have divergent careers, personal lives, and priorities will take care of an extremely expensive piece of property. We’ve discussed timelines for doing this and when might be a good time, and same deal.
There’s no indication either of my in-laws would pass in the next 10 years, but their health is declining. They also couldn’t live in this home independently if either of them became mobility-restricted (lots of stairs, far from major medical facilities). Should I start this conversation myself? Or just butt out and support my husband if things do get sticky? I should add my husband doesn’t even know if house is paid off or not.
— Need a Frank Conversation