Irish Daily Mail

I’ve been shunned by my family and feel so jealous

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YOUR story is very sad indeed. What you have endured would tax the strongest person. It might be that your son’s fatal addiction could be traced back to his father’s ill-treatment of the family — whatever the truth, your current ill-feeling is understand­able.

Yet bitterness, like acid, corrodes everything it touches. Entirely destructiv­e, it can eat away at affection, making people not want to see the sad, isolated one who has chosen to embrace pain, jealousy and rage.

Does that sound harsh? It’s just meant to be true. So many things in your email worry me that I must point them out, in order to advise. First, you imply that your own second marriage is less than happy, which (I suspect) fuels resentment and jealousy of your first husband.

Second, you describe your daughter-in-law as ‘materialis­tic’ and suggest she stayed with your tragic son because of his salary until she could bear it no more.

You blame her for exposing your grandsons to their father’s drinking. But what would you have had her do? Throw him out sooner?

Witnessing your son’s deteriorat­ion and taking on the burden of care must have been terrible. One result is that you have a job that’s beneath you. Then you say, ‘This is really where the problem is.’

Having read this several times I think you’re implying your lack of money is a factor in your being estranged from the family, whereas your ex-husband is financiall­y OK and so has access to the grandsons.

This interpreta­tion would link to your descriptio­n of your daughter-in-law as ‘materialis­tic.’ Is this fair? Is this really true? Nobody can ‘highjack’ your grief. I have nothing but compassion for your loss.

But if you resent your ex-husband’s access to your grandsons, it might be useful to wonder if he’s a welcome visitor because he and his second wife are happy.

You describe yourself as ‘selfish’ — so please examine this word carefully and consider what to do about it.

I sympathise with those feelings of being left out of the gathering to mark the anniversar­y of your son’s death — but maybe your daughter and daughter-in-law are worried it might be too much for you.

If you constantly carry ‘bitterness and jealousy’ and angry grief to the family table, it can make everyone else feel even more miserable. Of course, I’d prefer them to rally round you. But perhaps hostility to your ex, his wife and your daughter-in-law has become a fence that keeps them out.

I hope you accept their decision with grace, because vowing to do so (reflecting on what I have written) will give you a chance to ‘move on’. You have two sets of grandchild­ren to forge good relationsh­ips with and retirement to anticipate.

I hope that now you no longer have the agony of worrying about your poor son, you can work on your marriage and try to make positive plans for a future with your whole family.

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