Daily Press

Sudden divorce complicate­s wedding

- Adapted from an online discussion. Email tellme@washpost. com or write “Tell Me About It” c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071

Dear Carolyn: I’m at a complete loss. About a year ago, my father uprooted our close-knit and happy family by announcing he wanted to divorce my mom after 30 years of marriage. This has absolutely gutted my family and ruined our family friendship­s because of the disinforma­tion he’s spreading about her.

My mom’s lifelong dream was to throw me a “dream wedding,” which now feels unattainab­le due to the blow our family has taken, and the fact that he will be paying the bill. I don’t want to spend time with him or his friends, or put on a show for these people, but I want to make my mom happy, so I was OK with it. Until yesterday: I found out my dad has a new, younger girlfriend, and I can’t handle it.

How can I make my mom happy, cut off my dad and still somehow have a happy wedding, if possible? Please help. — Gutted

Dear Gutted: I’m sorry, that is a lot all at once.

First, you just learned about the girlfriend. Don’t do anything rash. Wait till the news settles.

Second, please let the “dream wedding” go. Not because your father did what he did, but because moms don’t get to have their kids’ dreams for them. Period.

Now, parents’ big dreams do work sometimes, where parent and kid are mostly aligned and you both go “yay!”

But these options apply only if they’re realistic, and they’re not here. Your dad is not paying the bill — not when you take moral issue with what he’s telling people. There’s no looking the other way at “disinforma­tion” just so he pays the bill.

So adult up and start Dream Plan B. Who’s paying for it, how much, what that buys, where, when, for how many people, including whom. Answer those and there’s your “happy wedding.”

Reader’s thought:

Your mom may believe it’s what you want. Maybe mom is dreading facing all those people knowing what her butthead of an ex is saying about her. It could be a total relief if you did something else.

Carolyn: Thank you guys for responding. Where I come from, big weddings are a rite of passage for the parents and their friends. It’s weird, but I don’t mind it. I agree with Carolyn, I need to adult up and figure out a Plan B, knowing my dad will have to be involved in some way. — Gutted again

Dear Gutted again: Will he? Spreading rumors is a legitimate dealbreake­r. Involvemen­t in your wedding is a privilege, not a right. If you haven’t asked him to cut the badmouthin­g crap, then ask, and weigh his response among all the complexiti­es of family. The “or else you won’t be at my wedding” is the part of the ultimatum you leave unspoken — and enforce if integrity demands it.

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