“Work honours”, my father used to say. The advice his three sons sowed in us is “never spend what you have not yet earned”. I apply that advice every day, avoid getting into debt, and pass on that lesson to my son Matthew.
I did get my share of my parents' inheritance, but I left it behind when I migrated; my siblings take care of it. And that's fine, I can't complain about providence, we are doing well here in Canada.
I was always the adventurous son, the entrepreneur, or the “brainiac” as I was affectionately called. I accept that I was the spoiled one, the protected one because of my visual impairment.
Like you, my friend @tarazkp, I came out of the suitcase, things were given to me as I planned them; of course, I worked hard for it. I'll leave Matthew a carpet of possibilities. Matthew will learn and inherit from me what my parents left me: work honours - .... Don't spend what you haven't earned yet.
This is good and hopefully, some of the tools to be able to take some of them. Money is just one of those tools of course. There are many more tools, including all the mindset, emotional, and process tools.
On a sidenote, do you think "adventure" is genetic? I am at least a third generation that has migrated.