Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Relationsh­ips take plenty of time and effort

- Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column.

Originally published in 2013.

Dear Annie: This is my second marriage. My husband has two children from his first marriage and a stepdaught­er. His first wife had several affairs. I feel it may have been due to his lack of support for her. He was always working and never had time for his wife and kids.

My husband and I are happy, and he is devoted to me. But he continues to work a great deal, and I am often lonely. I know it would help to have my own outside interests and hobbies and to go out with my friends, but I miss the closeness I had with my first husband. We did everything together.

The problem now is his kids. We have not spoken to them in nearly three years. When his oldest granddaugh­ter sent us a graduation invitation, I sent her a text thanking her for inviting us. She wrote back, “Who is this? I do not recognize the number.” That really hurt me. I gave nine years of my life to that little girl, trying to be a good stepgrandm­other. I wrote her back and said, “Once upon a time, you called me Grandmommy. I still love and miss you.” I’ve heard nothing more from her.

Hurting in Oklahoma Dear Oklahoma: First, while your relationsh­ip with these children seems distant, let’s not mix apples and oranges. Unless your phone number is programmed into this grandchild’s phone, your name would not come up when you texted, and she would not have known who was contacting her. You can call the children and grandchild­ren directly and ask how to warm up the relationsh­ip. But we can’t promise anything will change unless your husband becomes more involved, and he doesn’t seem inclined.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada