Montreal Gazette

Husband must learn to put up with sister-in-law

- ANNIE LANE Sisterly Stalemate — Glad I’m Retired

Dear Annie:

I am having issues with my sister, “Sharon.” We are both in our early 50s and have always had a good relationsh­ip, but she and my husband, “Rick,” haven’t gotten along in the 26 years I’ve been married.

I would describe their relationsh­ip as “tolerant” at best. Because of this, whenever she comes to town, I get together with her without my husband. But he doesn’t seem to mind. I do have Sharon over for dinner on occasion, and we manage to get through the evening.

The problem we’re facing now: My mother is not well, and we don’t know how much longer she has to live. My parents live near my husband and me, and Sharon comes into town to visit regularly and usually stays with them.

Sharon wanted to come into town last month and stay with Rick and me instead of our parents. (She had an argument with our dad on her previous visit and didn’t want to stay with them.) I knew that staying at my house would result in all kinds of stress between my husband and me. He tolerates Sharon in small doses, but to have her stay with us for a few days is really out of the question.

When I told my sister that staying with me would not be possible, she completely shut down. She refuses to talk to me, even though I emailed her explaining my situation. I have contacted my father, my brother and Sharon’s husband to help mediate, but to no avail. Do you think I should continue to reach out to her or let it go?

Dear Sisterly Stalemate:

I think the first person you need to talk to is your husband. My guess is Sharon is fed up with your deferring to his preference­s all these years. Can he not put their difference­s aside for just a few days? If his fear is that it would become a habit and she’d be staying with you every month, then you can address that by setting clear terms with your sister. I understand spending time with her might not be a walk in the park, but family is family.

Dear Annie:

I was unhappy but not surprised to see a recent question by someone whose electricit­y is being stolen by a guest who owns an electric car. This is becoming a big trend. Also, I’m seeing more and more retail establishm­ents, government buildings, etc., not only providing free charging stations but also reserving prime parking spaces to those who plug the vehicles in. It seems a parking spot reserved as a charging station is now a higher priority near the door than a handicappe­d parking space!

Dear Glad:

You may actually be noticing handicappe­d-accessible charging spots for electrical vehicles. Many businesses aim to make charging spaces accessible to disabled patrons driving electric vehicles. Logistical­ly, this can end up meaning that all the EV spaces are adjacent to handicappe­d spaces.

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