Suddenly it was a MISUNDERSTANDING? What is your question? She Fucked around and Found out. Your son is NO BETTER. She will continue to push you out, but pretend, over and over and over that she "forgot" to tell you about something or say that the grandchild or grandchildren are too sick to visit gma. Or a hundred other things that greedy ungrateful people do while trying to pretend you are overreacting. She will only keep you in their lives enough to guarantee that you still include them in your will. Even a TRUST can be got around if it's not set up to be foolproof. There's more to it than saying that the grandchildren get everything. Talk to a reputable attorney (do NOT DO IT ONLINE) and make sure that you have an executor who is beyond reproach and has no incentives for monetary gains. Also do NOT trust your son in this matter. I have seen people who claim to "break up" and are still together, just for the sake of getting back in the Will. I still HATE PEOPLE.
My DIL Erased Me From Family Photos, So I Made Sure She Regretted It

When your children get married, it’s usually a joyous occasion. It’s a time to build new relationships and grow your family. But it doesn’t always work out the way we plan. One of our readers, Elena, wrote to us about being excluded by her own DIL.
This is Elena’s story.
Dear <strong>Bright Side,
My son got married a few months ago, and I was over the moon. His wife was a wonderful woman, and we got along very well. Or at least that was what I thought. Last month, I noticed something strange when I visited them.
My DIL had a family album on the coffee table, so I went through it while my son made coffee, and I noticed that every picture that had me in it was gone. I was either cropped out of the images, or the part I was in was replaced with a stock-photo-looking background.
I was furious and hurt, but I stayed quiet to avoid making an unnecessary fuss about something silly. But later that night it started eating at me. So I sent my son a message and asked him about it. He brushed it off by saying, “oh, maybe she wanted a cleaner look.”
His words didn’t sit well with me at all. What did he mean with “she wanted a cleaner look?” Was I making her photos look untidy? The next day, he suddenly called me and asked me to go see his wife. So I went over and asked her about it.
She said that she had made the album for her family and didn’t want to include me because they said I “wasn’t really family.” That was enough to send me over the edge. I told her that accepting my son meant she was accepting his family too. She couldn’t just marry him and expect me to fade out of the picture.
She told me that I should watch myself if I wanted any part in my grandchild’s life. That’s how she revealed she was pregnant. By threatening to erase me from my grandchild’s life if I didn’t give her what she wanted. I was beyond furious.
I left without saying another word, but that night I sat down and typed out an official email to my son. I told him that the day they got married, I added them both to my will. They were going to inherit a good amount each.
But since my DIL doesn’t consider me to be real family, I have changed my will. It will bypass them and go directly into a trust account that will be opened to my grandchildren once they are old enough. If she wants to erase me from his life, I will erase her from mine.
Within minutes, my phone rang and my DIL apologized continuously. She says she didn’t mean what she said, that I just misunderstood her. But I know what I heard and what she meant. Now my son is inviting me for dinner so we can “talk about it.”
So Bright Side, what should I do? I don’t want to give in on this, but I’m not sure what my DIL will try to do or say during the dinner. And I don’t want her to make me look like the villain in front of my son.
Regards,
Elena M.
Some advice from our Editorial team.


Excellent decision and setting gup the trust. I agree with Kimberly Regner about not dispensing any assets before age 30 or even 35. Your DIL has shown who she truly is. BELIEVE HER.
Your DIL and son aren't sorry. They're just missing the money you just took away from them. When you make the new will and put everything in trust for your grandson be sure he'll be at least 30yrs old before getting it because at 18 or 21 kids are still very much under the influence of their parents. They'll pounce on him the moment he gets the money at that young age.
You misunderstood her? That's not an apology. Skip the dinner. Finish the new will.
Tell her that since she's only doing this for the money you're keeping it in a trust. That they will have no access to. Let them do what they want. Remind yourself that it's not you they want but what you have.
She
should tell her son and daughter-in-law that she will put them back in her will ,but not do it ,this way she's able to have a relationship with her grandchild. Let them find out when you die that they are not in the will.
Dear Elena,
Thank you for reaching out to us and sharing your story. We understand how difficult this must be, especially now that you have a grandchild on the way that is being held over your head.
At this point, the most important thing you can do is shift the conversation from emotions to boundaries. Go to that dinner with clarity, not anger. Don’t get dragged into debating whether you “misunderstood” her words, stick to the facts.
She cropped you out of photos, she explicitly said you’re “not really family,” and she threatened your place in your grandchild’s life. Those aren’t misunderstandings, those are choices she made. Frame the issue around respect, not inheritance.
Tell them both that you’re not competing with her family, you’re simply asking to be treated with the same dignity you’ve always shown her. Let them know you’re willing to move forward, but only if your role as a grandmother is acknowledged, not erased.
And when it comes to your will, keep that decision private going forward. Don’t let your financial leverage become the centerpiece of the relationship.
Right now, your power lies in calmly showing that your presence in your grandchild’s life is not negotiable, and that no amount of revisionist photo albums or backtracking words will change the fact that you are family.
Elena’s situation isn’t an easy one at all, and there is no way of telling whether she’ll be able to heal the rift in the relationship at this point. But she isn’t the only one with DIL issues.
Another one of our readers reached out and shared the struggles she is having with her DIL. Read the full story here: I Made an Innocent Comment About My DIL’s Weight—Now My Family Won’t Speak to Me.
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