DEAR SOMEONE ELSE’S MOM: Growing up I spent most of the summers and school breaks at my grandparents’ house. There was a boatload of kids my and my brother’s age to play with and we ended up making good friends of several of them.
Advertisement
My grandfather was a collector, you could say. He liked to work on all sorts of different projects and went through a series of different hobbies. All that meant he always had odds and ends of things around the house and sometimes in the driveway and on the front and back porches. Some of that stuff was still there when he died last year just six months after my grandmother.
Even though the house went to my mom and her siblings, none of them live locally. I, however, do, and since I have kept in touch with some of the old neighborhood kids and their families, guess who is getting tapped to do something about the stuff my grandfather left behind?
My wife and I have gone over there a few times and done what we can to get things looking better outside, including staying on top of cutting the grass and getting rid of the weeks. But some of the bigger stuff, like a small motorboat and an old Ford pickup are still in the driveway. The exterior of the house itself is showing some wear and tear as well.
I know my mom and her siblings plan to put the place up for sale in the fall. In the meantime, I keep getting calls and texts from my old friends who still live in the neighborhood complaining about what hasn’t been taken care of yet.
Beyond what my wife and I have done, I don’t have any power in this whole set-up. I have told everyone that and about the upcoming sale.
Before that happens my mom and everyone else are supposed to come and get a few things and then the rest is going to either be sold at an estate sale or be taken away by a company that does that sort of thing.
What more do people want out of me? I don’t want old friendships to go bad, but their bugging me for what I have no power over is beginning to get to me. --- NOT MY MESS
DEAR NOT MY MESS: I don’t blame you for being annoyed at finding yourself in the middle of this situation.
Since it sounds as if there’s a plan in place for your grandparents’ house, all you can reasonably do is what you’ve been doing by letting people know what’s in the works.
One thing that might help is if you could nail down a more specific timeline for when things are supposed to happen. At the same time, inform your mother and her siblings what you’ve shared with the neighbors thus far, and that you’d like to let the neighbors know they should contact those family members directly involved in the planning for further details, not you.