Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

OK to reach out to future sister-in-law

- JEANNE PHILLIPS Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Dear Abby: I am very lucky to have wonderful inlaws. I have been married to their son for five years and together with him for 10. We have one child. My in-laws are divorced but friendly, and my husband has one brother.

My question revolves around my brother-in-law’s new fiancée, “Tami.” They dated only a short time prior to getting engaged. My in-laws were very slow to warm up to me and hard to get to know. It took almost four years for me to become close to them and feel comfortabl­e.

At this point, I am deeply involved with the family. My mother-in-law and I talk almost every day, and my father-in-law shows a lot of affection toward me. I have received all the family heirlooms and am the “daughter my mother-in-law never had.”

It is apparent that Tami feels less welcomed, and it makes me sad. The difference in the way family members interact with us is striking, and I can’t imagine that it makes her feel good.

How can I help her feel welcomed and comfortabl­e in a slow-to-warm-up family? — Sharing Good Will in the Midwest

Dear Sharing: It is entirely possible that Tami has taken the cold shoulder she has received personally. She is lucky to have you as an ally. If you haven’t already, it would be a kindness to have a private chat with her and share what you have written to me about your in-laws’ family dynamics.

Dear Abby: My mother passed away six years ago. I have two older brothers and a father in my immediate family. There was a rift between my brothers and me several years ago. I made clear to them in a letter how badly they had hurt me. Instead of apologizin­g, they choose to no longer have a relationsh­ip with me.

Dad refuses to get involved. He says his kids are adults, and we should work it out. Recently, he admitted he was verbally abusive to my mom while I was growing up. I remember it well from my childhood. I believe my brothers mimicked his behavior with me while I was growing up and as adults.

I resent my dad for not helping to resolve this issue. What’s the best way for me to address this with him instead of harboring resentment and avoiding a relationsh­ip with him? — Without Family in New Jersey

Dear Without Family: What exactly do you expect your father to do at this point? Order your brothers to apologize? He is neither willing nor capable of doing it, as he has made clear.

Accept that this is the way things are and keep a cordial relationsh­ip with your father if you can.

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