Whew. That's a LOT! I get it.
I loved reading about the "strong love and respect" between you and Hol. That's very reassuring. As to whether she should have warned you pre-tirade, sounds like she was already losing control of herself in that moment, so was past being able to tell you, "This is going to be a massive vent, not about you...can you listen?" I love how all those grownup preambles [scripts, my specialty] do us about zero good in the moment....
Her vibes with Buck? Perhaps if you did not discuss with her the details of what you're working on as you grow closer with him, that would help? IOW, if instead you treat your relationship with your man as entirely private territory, and project confidence that you are he are two happy older adults who are in charge of your own relationship connection and decisions? But not sharing details or the entire blow by blow.
Maybe...generalities. "Buck's really wonderful and supportive. I'm really glad to have him in my life, and we're glad to be building our relationship." [script alert!] But then stop with the deep, personal psychological layers of it, which might be too much for a child of any age to handle well. Much less if she's feeling vulnerable. As a separate thing, is there a simple way to spell out for her exactly what her ownership and secure place are on the mountain, in the trust, whatever?
I hope you can make all those decision (intimate and estate) without involving her in the process. If she just knows, "You are taken care of, and you will never have to be worried about your home here". If she's MORE interested, or protective, or paranoid...about your personal plans for your estate (and thusly, her inheritance) -- we could be creeping into entitlement OR boundary territory.
Anyway, I'm not sure I'm right (repeat ad nauseum). Things may have changed or be different than I comprehend about larger estate issues. The way I was raised was that it would be a shocking breach of manners for an inheritee (?) to try to influence whatever they are going to inherit. Because their loyalty and help to a parent was bout filial duty, not manipulation.
Hmmm. Did I ever have those thoughts? Yes I did. And felt wrong about it. So...more Hops' projection....filter, filter, filter!
You sound very clear, not rocked to your bones.
Buck belongs to you, and I hope you boundarize the space you need as two equal adults to negotiate and make your way into your future as a couple without family drama. You don't need it.
Hugs and gratitude,
Hops
PS -- A "twitterpated" Buck is the most delightful image I've contemplated today. !!
