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My Son and His Wife Gave Me a Flat as a Retirement Gift: The Day They Handed Me the Keys, Took Me to the Solicitor, and Transformed My Golden Years—Even Though I Tried to Refuse This Generous Surprise
My son and his wife gifted me a flat when I retired
On the day it happened, my son and daughter-in-law came to me with a set of keys, then took me to the solicitors office. I was so overwhelmed with emotion, I could hardly speak, so I managed only a whisper:
Why are you giving me such an expensive gift? I dont need this!
Its a little retirement bonus, my son replied. You can let it out to tenants if youd like!
At that point, I hadnt even visited the pension office yet! I had only just been made redundant and sent into well-deserved retirement. Yet my son and his wife had sorted everything without me. I tried to protest, but they simply told me not to argue.
Ill admit, my relationship with my daughter-in-law hasnt always been smooth sailing: sometimes peace, and then, out of nowhere, stormy arguments. Both of us could cause a row; we each had our moments. We took a long time to get used to each other. We both had to learn not to quarrel, not to fight. But for several years now, thank heavens, weve lived in harmony.
When my sister-in-law heard about the gift, she rang right away, offering congratulations and then praised herself: I must have raised a fine daughter if she didnt object to such a generous gift for you! Then she added that she personally would never accept such a present, and would have turned it down for the sake of her own grandchild.
That night, I lay awake wondering if I could manage on just my pension, for I really didnt need much. In the morning, I called my grandson and gently asked how he would feel if I set up the flat for him. Hell turn sixteen soon, heading off to college, no doubt acquiring a girlfriend and you can hardly bring a date back to your parents place, can you?
Gran, dont worry! he said. Id rather stand on my own two feet and support myself!
No one was interested in taking the flat. I offered it to my daughter-in-law, my grandson, and even back to my son.
I remembered an incident that happened to my elder sister: her sister-in-law gave up her own house, only to end up living in council accommodation. She clung to that tiny room as though it were a lifeline.
And my uncle Hes been gone fifteen years now, and still his heirs dont speak because they could never divide his estate without falling out.
I once watched a programme recounting how a son, after his parents had signed their home over to him, threw them out and sold it, leaving his own mother and father homeless.
I cried perhaps from gratitude, perhaps from pride in my children. After a visit to the pension office, I learnt Id be receiving two thousand pounds monthly, and then my son arranged to rent the flat for three thousand pounds a month. In that moment, I truly appreciated what a generous gift my children had given me: it really was something fit for royalty.
And I realised, sometimes kindness comes full circle, and family brings the most unexpected blessings. True generosity, I learned, is less about property and more about the love and trust we share a gift thats beyond price.
