Waterloo Region Record

Husband wants to cut parents out of his life

- Dear Ellie

QMy husband of 30 years seemed on edge when we were with his parents. Early on, they seemed to dislike me, though I’d always been respectful.

His contact with them has been sporadic. They’d all go months without talking. Ten years ago, he finally realized that his father was a selfish, abusive bully who intimidate­d him, his sister, and his mother as he grew up.

He also realized that his mother was a willing follower who looked away when his father was verbally, and sometimes physically, abusive toward my husband and his sister, who died at 41.

My husband became their only child and our children are their only grandchild­ren.

We had a very rough time financiall­y and personally 10 years ago, during the 2008 recession.

We had four small children to care for, and an issue with infidelity, but with counsellin­g and love our relationsh­ip’s stronger than ever.

During those hard times we asked his parents for help.

They said we could stay in a guest house on their property for the summer while we saved enough to rent a small house.

After two weeks, they told us to leave. It was devastatin­g.

We don’t consider it their “job” to help us.

But it was hard to see our children sometimes go without proper food while his parents enjoyed their new boat.

We stayed in a small, miserable mobile home for two years.

Eventually, the kids and I spent a summer in Canada with my family who helped us.

My husband stayed in the States with friends and worked two jobs so we could save for our own home. My concern now is with my husband. His mother was diagnosed with cancer a year ago.

His father came to my husband’s workplace (he part-owns a popular local restaurant) and yelled at him about not keeping in touch or caring about his mother.

He repeated this public performanc­e a couple of weeks later.

Since then, my husband’s refused to speak to, or see, his parents saying that he wishes them well, but doesn’t want any contact with them. But they’re now both 70. How will he feel if one or both parents passes away?

My husband says he now knows who his parents are as people.

He’s not interested in therapy or counsellin­g because he knows they’ll not change or suddenly respect him as a man and a person.

Do I accept his decision to cut his parents from his life or do I encourage him to see them and offer some support to his cancer-stricken mother?

I love him and don’t want to see him hurt or living with regret.

He’s a good person, a great father, and has always been a good son.

They were abusive parents when he was young, selfish grandparen­ts later.

They’re toxic to your husband who’s still dealing with anger and hurt, and recent public humiliatio­n from his father.

He has every right to refuse seeing them.

But he should know that their eventual passing will also affect him.

If he remains disconnect­ed, there’s no chance for resolution, no way to see them as people who were damaged themselves in their upbringing.

But the ugly scenes at his work are too recent for him to handle that now. Tell him your concerns. Say that you support his decision, but that getting counsellin­g about this (it’s helped you both previously) may make future events regarding his parents easier.

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