AITA for telling my dad that he has ruined our family legacy?

A man is frustrated with his parents for selling their family farmhouse, which had been a cherished meeting place for generations, to buy a remote cabin on an isolated island. His father, who retired early and used up the family legacy, now asks for a loan to expand the cabin for family gatherings.

The man feels that his parents’ actions have ruined the family legacy and worries that future generations wonโ€™t experience the history tied to the farmhouse. His parents, however, consider his feelings entitled. Read the original story below…

‘ย AITA for telling my dad that he has ruined our family legacy?’

My parents raised me (33M) and my sister in western Canada, but after attending university, both of us have since moved away. I now live in the UK and my sister lives on the opposite coast of Canada.

My dad’s family has always been upper middle class and the “centerpiece” of his family was an old farmhouse about an hour outside of a major city that my great great grandfather built. This means I was part of the 5th generation to be there.

It was modestly sized with 3 bedrooms over 2 floors, not some massive mansion in the countryside. It sat on less than an acre of land. That being said, it’s been the family meeting spot for literally generations. My grandparents lived there until they died.

This is where my sister and I spent hundreds of days in our childhood. Although my dad’s family wasn’t excessively wealthy, there was always this idea of preserving something for the next generation to make life a bit easier.

My grandfather was generous and helped my parents often, but sensibly made sure that the family money was always growing. He would gift my parents weekends away and similar. My parents also massively benefitted from this by having almost 50% of their first home being paid for by my dad’s parents.

My grandmother passed away, then eventually my grandfather did as well. He passed about 10 years ago now. After he passed away, my parents sold the farmhouse to “create a new family meeting spot”. At the time, my sister and I both fought this idea, but our parents did it anyway.

If I had the funds, I would have bought it from them myself, but I had just left university so had no income. They insisted this would be best for everyone. With the money from this sale, my father retired about 5 years early and they bought a piece of land on a remote island on one of Canada’s many lakes.

It’s 4 hours from the nearest airport and only accessible by boat and only in the summer. There is no road access and the lake partially freezes in the winter, which means you can’t get there by boat. They built a cabin on this property and it sleeps 4 people if you pull out the couch.

They have been living at the cabin for the warm half of the year and freeloading at my aunt and uncle’s house for the rest. My parents recently asked me for a loan of several thousand dollars (which I don’t have) to expand their cabin to sleep more people so that “we could all be together at the cabin”.

This idea disgusts me. My father inherited money that has been well cared for for literally generations through moderate use and he’s already blown through it less than 10 years later.

Between this remote cabin and taking early retirement, he and my mom have managed to use it all and are now imposing on me to give them more money for a cabin that I will probably never use (as I live in the UK).

Going to the old farmhouse was fine before because it was much closer to an airport, could fit us all, and was accessible year-round. We can’t even use this cabin for Christmas. The way I see it, my parents have completely ruined our family legacy because of their greed and they can’t even see it.

If I ever have kids, they will never get to experience all the family history at the farmhouse like I did. My sister has a kid on the way and we’ve already discussed how sad we are that the kid will never see the house. The idea of helping the next generation has ended with my parents and this seems s**fish to me.

I told my parents this and they told me that I was being e**itled and s**fish. I have had to work much harder to get where I am than my parents did. I have 2 degrees, have built my career over 3 continents, and have never taken money from my parents unless it was a gift for Christmas or my birthday.

I paid my own way through university with summer jobs and student loans. My parents both worked simple jobs and never went to university. Neither of my parents advanced their careers and stayed on pretty entry-level positions.

I now believe that they’ve purposefully coasted through life because they knew they could afford to if they used the family money for retirement.. AITAH?

Check out how the community responded:

WatermelonRindPickleย โˆ’ย  NTA. You are not in a financial state to give your parents money. End of discussion.

Carpenter-_-Fancyย โˆ’ย  NTA – sorry about the farmhouse. It would have been nice to keep in the family. Especially if they know how much it meant to you and your sister. That is the issue when youโ€™ve been handed so many things, it can take away motivation (not all the time, but seems more often than not)

Impressive-Amoeba-97ย โˆ’ย  The change must begin with you and your sister. Give nothing to your parents. You need to save it for a new meeting place for family. Not them, but for your sister’s family, and yours if you have one.

I keep having these tiny home A-frames with 1-2 “room” lofts coming across my screen periodically, heavy on the windows, absolutely gorgeous. I don’t know if you can do that in the UK, but here in the states, it’s something I’d do with a piece of land. Work on buying the land. Begin it. The legacy restarts with you.

Janmcwbย โˆ’ย  NTA- boomer here, donโ€™t give your parents any money. I realize they in Canada and thereโ€™s universal healthcare but where is the nearest hospital? Go to the Aging parent subreddit to see that you are not alone with poor parent life decisions.

WorldSenior9986ย โˆ’ย  NTA- sounds like s**fish behavior on their part

No-You5550ย โˆ’ย  NTA My grandparents owned a farm the land was about 150 acres. The house was a single level 4 bedroom. They raised 12 kids there. All of us cousins would spend our summers there running free. When my grandparents died the aunts and uncles sold the place and split the money.

In two years the money was gone. All we have left is the memories. I’m 68 and I still think it was the greed of a fast buck.

Laughingfoxcreatesย โˆ’ย  NTA. Your folks blew their money and are now begging and g**lighting their child who doesnโ€™t have the budget to help them. Iโ€™m embarrassed for them.

LoosePassage4058ย โˆ’ย  NTA. Thereโ€™s something wrong with your parents generation, they donโ€™t believe in generational anything. Itโ€™s really sad

MiserableCheddarย โˆ’ย  NTA bunch of cunts

ConfusedAt63ย โˆ’ย  If it were me, I would explain to them that they apparently raised me better than they were raised bc I have the good sense not to bail out people that sabotaged themselves financially bc of their selfishness, greed and bad planning.

Is his disappointment justified, or are his parents entitled to their choices? What do you think? Share your thoughts below!

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