Toronto Star

Parents hope to mend relationsh­ip with daughter

- Ellie is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

Q: We are the parents of a 37-yearold married daughter with three preschool children. She and her family live in our neighbouri­ng country.

She met her husband online while she was in college there. He’s 12 years older, and while courting her, he was going through a devastatin­g divorce.

His child from that marriage was but weeks old when his wife filed for divorce, which eventually bankrupted him.

We weren’t thrilled with this situation for our daughter, but kept it to ourselves, although she “knew.”

He’s a very hard working, responsibl­e man, however very narcissist­ic, in our opinion.

He is, and has been, very cold toward us, although they live in a house we paid for, and we’ve been very supportive in every way.

Our daughter, with whom we were very close before the marriage, is lost to us.

She’s gradually become a mirror image of her husband. She began cutting us out of her life and personal sharing almost as soon as she met him.

She has a medical background yet has embraced anti-vaccinatio­n to the extreme and this has morphed into many other conspiracy theories.

We’ve told her we don’t believe in any of it but have not gone to great lengths to try and change her mind.

Yet, she’s taken it as a personal affront that we won’t go down the same road and seems to have written us off.

There’s some communicat­ion but zero closeness.

What to do? We already worked with a family therapist who’s declared us to be kind, loving parents, and concluded that the issue isn’t with us but with her and her husband. Devastated

A: Parental or grandparen­t alienation is deeply hurtful, and it’s often very hard to understand how or why it happened. A look at the cold facts may help: She’s your only child, with no siblings for her to bounce things off regarding “issues” she has with mom or dad.

There’s only her husband, 12 years older than her, who’s distant from you.

He’s a hard-worker, busy, narcissist­ic (even undiagnose­d it often translates to someone believing they’re “always right”).

Your daughter’s a profession­al woman with three very young kids. Also, very busy. Meanwhile, she’s found strong support among anti-vaccinatio­n adherents. That’s her choice and obviously his, too.

Even your minor disagreeme­nt put her off. She’s under strong influences from her husband and a belief system of conspiracy theories, which have a strong following in some places.

You may be surprised at my advice: If you want to try to reconnect with your daughter, tell her that you’re sorry that you disagreed with her.

Say that you respect that they are the parents and will make their own choices for raising their children.

By doing that, you take away the opportunit­y that they had to disengage from you.

There’s still hope here for a relationsh­ip of sorts with her through communicat­ion, so long as you show interest only, and don’t challenge her. Or he will likely cut you off completely.

Meanwhile, build slowly toward having chats with your daughter that are relatively relaxed and supportive, even if brief.

If you can talk together when she’s relaxed, perhaps while she’s out walking, you can catch up on what’s happening in her life, without any judgment.

When travel is permitted again — and this may not be wise until you’ve had the anti-COVID-19 vaccine that they won’t take — then, make every effort to visit so you can see your grandchild­ren. Ellie’s tip of the day Apologize for a past disagreeme­nt while communicat­ion is still possible, to try to avoid total estrangeme­nt. Ellie Tesher

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