Daily Press

Mom pressing estranged children for contact

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Copyright 2022 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: My brother and I are both in our late 30s.

After years of strife and our mother’s refusal to respect any of our stated boundaries, in 2020 (after several therapy sessions with her), we made the decision to go “no contact.”

We told her in therapy and in writing that we were no longer going to have a relationsh­ip, along with the reasons why.

Both of us were also moving, and we told her that we would not give her our new addresses.

She ignored that, hired a lawyer and a private investigat­or, got our addresses and had things delivered to our homes.

She had her lawyer contact us. She sent emails and physical mail to both of our workplaces. We did not respond. Finally, she had a family friend, “Laura,” contact me.

Laura is very nice. About 15 years ago, she let me stay at her home in Europe.

Her email stated that our mother is devastated by the estrangeme­nt, family will always be family, no one is perfect, etc.

There was nothing indicating that our mother has made any adjustment­s or that a renewed relationsh­ip would be anything other than the constant turmoil of the past.

None of this is Laura’s fault. Do I have any obligation to respond? I’m concerned that my mother would interpret any response as a sign that her persistenc­e is “working.”

— Estranged

Dear Estranged: When parents write to me about estrangeme­nt, they frequently state that they have no idea why an estrangeme­nt has occurred. Your mother does know the reason, because you have told her.

She has designated her friend to be her representa­tive, because all of her attempts have failed. She is now “using” her friend, which is another boundary she has crossed — with her friend and with you.

“Laura” has stated a number of truisms: Family will always be family, no one is perfect, etc. There is nothing in the message to indicate that your mother is making a move toward change.

You are not obligated to reply. If you do reply, I suggest that you respond: “I received your email. I am reminded again of your kindness when I was traveling in Europe all those years ago. Thank you again for your hospitalit­y. Otherwise, I hope you are well.”

If she contacts you again as your mother’s representa­tive without any indication­s regarding change, then you can further make your point by ignoring it.

Dear Amy: My fiancé “Benjamin” and I planned and then replanned our wedding because of the pandemic. It has been reschedule­d twice now.

Before rescheduli­ng again, we realized we have had it. Everything about this big event — the concerns about our family members and guests, the details and checklists, and the expense — seems ridiculous to us now.

We have decided to get married quietly, canceling the celebratio­n.

We are going to disappoint a lot of people. We’re a little freaked out about that. Words of courage, please? — Nervous

Dear Nervous: I commend you for anchoring your plans now to your important intention, which is to get married.

Go to the courthouse next weekend — if that is what you want to do. You could notify local family to witness and have lunch afterward (if you want).

One caution: Don’t post your news on social media until you notify all of your wedding guests about your change of plans — perhaps accompanie­d by a photo of your little ceremony.

These guests should be the first to know.

Thank people for hanging in there through the ups and downs of your planning, invite people to call you if they have questions, and move on with your married life.

Dear Amy: Your recent response to “Yikes” really made me smile — especially this sentence: “Barroom epiphanies can be extremely powerful, but the point of enlightenm­ent is not to waste time beating up on yourself, but to take the insight and the wisdom forward …”

“Barroom epiphanies!” Where’d you get that phrase?

—AFan

Dear Fan: I’ve had my share of barroom epiphanies. The point is not to waste these moments of insight, even after you sober up.

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