No wedding invitation. No baby announcements. No holidays together. And if this guy gets his way, there never will be—not unless Mom and Dad can come up with a quarter million dollars, plus interest.
In a brutally honest post on Reddit's "Am I the A–hole?" forum, one man explained exactly why he's been estranged from his parents for years. The short version? They torched his inheritance trying to play investment manager, and he's still furious about it.
Here's what happened. His grandparents died when he was young and left him an inheritance specifically designed to cover his education and give him a financial head start. His grandfather had put the money in a particular account—presumably something conservative and stable. But his father had other ideas.
"My dad decided that he could do better than the account my grandfather left my money in," the man wrote.
Spoiler alert: he could not.
The Damage
By the time the son turned 18, there was $27,000 left. That's it. Meanwhile, his cousins and sister each walked away with roughly 10 times that amount from similar inheritances. He estimates he should have received around $270,000. "That was about 10% of what everyone else got," he said. "If my parents had left it alone, I would be in a good place."
To make matters worse, his parents also spent down part of his mother's inheritance. His sister, who was old enough to receive her funds directly, got her full share without anyone tinkering with it. No "help" from Dad. No optimization attempts. Just the money, as intended.
Fast forward to today. The parents, now approaching retirement, want back into their son's life. They'd like to meet the grandkids. Maybe patch things up. But he's not interested in apologies without action.
"I said that if they replaced my money, with interest, I would forgive them and allow them to meet my kids."
He calculates that figure at somewhere between $250,000 and $300,000. His parents balked, saying it would devastate their retirement savings. His response? "I asked them how much they would have if my idiot father didn't think he knew better than my grandfather."
No Forgiveness Without Penance
This isn't just about the money, he insists. It's about teaching his kids a lesson in accountability. "I want my children to know that if they are wronged, 'I'm sorry' doesn't mean anything without actual penance."
His sister thinks he's being cruel. He offered a compromise: if she doesn't think the money matters, she could hand over her inheritance to make him whole. "She said she wasn't going to do that." He also noted that she's child-free, which means his kids are their parents' only shot at grandchildren. Still no movement from his side.
When critics online suggested he was overreacting, he fired back: "If you don't think a quarter of a million dollars would make a difference in your life, you are welcome to slide that amount my way." He later joked that anyone offering $300,000 could "buy my forgiveness."
Some commenters speculated the money wasn't actually lost in bad investments—it was quietly funneled into his parents' retirement accounts. "So basically… you're their retirement fund?" one person wrote. Another added, "Funny how Dad 'knew better' with your money, but not his."
Legal Action? Not Interested
Several people urged him to consult a lawyer or at least demand a forensic accounting of where the money went. But he's not pursuing legal action. His life, he says, is already complete without them. "I have money, and a wife, and kids. I also have a great group of friends and coworkers. On top of that, my wife's family is amazing."
As for his parents? "I choose forgiveness and no relationship."
The situation isn't as unusual as it might sound. A 2025 survey from Choice Mutual found that roughly two-thirds of Millennials and Gen Z adults expect to receive an inheritance from their parents or grandparents. On average, they anticipate around $335,000. That makes the amount this man lost feel less like an anomaly and more like a missed life milestone.
Some might call his expectations entitled—after all, his parents technically had legal control over the money. Others see it differently: a lost shot at homeownership, education debt avoided, or simply a financial cushion that could have changed everything. Financial mistakes happen, sure. But so do lifelong consequences.
The Bigger Picture
Whether you're planning to leave money behind or hoping to receive it, financial professionals consistently recommend working with an adviser to make sure those assets actually serve their intended purpose. Without clear structures, legal safeguards, or at least a honest conversation, what's meant to build a future can disappear into someone else's poorly timed stock pick—or retirement fund.
This man isn't interested in reconciliation for its own sake. He's drawn a line, and it's expensive. Whether that's justice or stubbornness depends on who you ask. But one thing's for sure: his parents won't be meeting their grandkids anytime soon.