Los Angeles Times

Time to act like real father

- Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to ask amy@amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: I have an issue that I need to bring to you. I always felt that my daughter “Carol” (from my first marriage) isn’t really “mine.”

She was the product of a wife who cheated on me, and although my wife always swore that Carol was my child, I find that highly unlikely.

I feel that Carol knows this, but we are both uncomforta­ble about bringing that up.

I was involved in her upbringing and accepted her as mine in her earlier years, but we just grew apart.

I see her on Facebook from time to time and although she is now a grandmothe­r, she seems unhappy — in a hidden way.

Her mother died 20 years ago.

I think I have located her reluctant, biological father, but I don’t know if I should get involved because she may shun him, or she may be hurt because it’s been 50 years now.

A DNA test will be the proof and I am scared that (1) this whole thing will be about a father who doesn’t want her; (2) I may freak out and find that after 50 years she was mine all along.

I wouldn’t want her to hate both men involved. It also could lead to an unlikely happy ending. How should I approach this? Caught

Dear Caught: One way to begin would be to try your hardest to build a relationsh­ip with your daughter. If she seems unhappy “in a hidden way,” then you could start by reaching out to her, checking in, finding out a bit about her adult life, and connecting with her children and grandchild­ren.

I assume that your own guilt and ambivalenc­e about her possible parentage — and your implicit rejection of her — is keeping you away. You would feel better now if you acknowledg­ed your own regrets and apologized for being so distant.

You could say, quite truthfully, that you and her mother had a difficult relationsh­ip, and that on some level you let your feelings of betrayal affect your ability to be present with her as a dad.

I don’t think it’s wise to connect your daughter with her supposed reluctant biological father, or to share your specific suspicions with her. Let her draw her own conclusion­s and make her own choices.

If at your core you want to find out if she is your biological daughter, you should be brave enough to ask her to take a DNA test. However, you have been prescient about the emotional risk involved to both of you. Pay attention.

Dear Amy: My husband and I have no children but we have three nephews.

Two nephews live near us, so we’re in pretty close contact with them. One of our nephews has always lived in a different town.

My question involves how we should divide up our estate. I want to divide it into equal amounts, leaving onethird to each nephew.

My husband thinks we should give more to the two nephews we have a closer relationsh­ip with. Do you have any suggestion­s?

In a Quandary

Dear Quandary: In this situation, I vote for equal financial shares.

If you had one particular­ly close nephew of the three, you might single that one out for an extra award, but in the scenario you describe, you would not be favoring one of the three but excluding one of the three. I believe there’s a difference.

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