The decision of whether or not to have children should always remain between a couple. When outside pressures creep in—especially from family—things can quickly become complicated.
Consider this example: a mother, desperate for grandchildren, took things so far that she risked losing her daughter entirely.
“I told her she wouldn’t be getting my inheritance.”
The mother explained: “My daughter married last year, and I’d quietly been hoping for a grandchild ever since. Then one day, she told me, ‘Mom, I’m infertile.’ I was shocked. And in my frustration, I told her, ‘You won’t be receiving my inheritance.’”
Some time later, the daughter and her husband adopted a little girl. The daughter asked her mother if that child would count as family. The mother’s response was cold: ‘No—she’s not biologically yours.’
To her surprise, only a week later, the couple showed up with their daughter, adoption papers in hand—and a lawyer.
The mother recalls: “My daughter’s eyes were red from crying, but her voice was steady. She told me, ‘You made it clear that blood is all that matters to you. So we made a decision.’ Her husband held their little girl tightly as he handed me a document.
It was a petition to terminate my legal rights as a grandmother.
My daughter looked me straight in the eye and said, ‘If she isn’t your family, neither are we.’ Then she walked out and slammed the door.
I stood there in shock. In one moment, I realized—I hadn’t just lost the chance to be a grandmother. I had lost my daughter too.
Now I don’t know what to do.”