Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mom refuses to accept gay daughter

- Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com.

Dear Carolyn: I have no idea what the right decision is here. We’re a family of three adult sisters. My sister “Leah” is estranged from our mom because Mom won’t accept that she’s gay. My other sister, “May,” wants to plan a family trip – post-COVID, of course. We’ve traditiona­lly done these trips every few years, and we meet in a central spot for a few days of fun.

Leah won’t vacation with Mom, which I understand and support. So do I go? I’d like to see Dad and May and the cousins, but, if I go, am I condoning Mom’s behavior? So I skip and hurt May? I’m just not sure what the right thing to do is.

– Just Not Sure

Just Not Sure: If you skip, then it’s your mother hurting May – and hurting your father and these cousins – by forcing you all to choose between your mother and Leah. Which really isn’t a choice, once you put it to even a moment’s scrutiny: You stand by your sister, not the person rejecting who she is.

And this is not about choosing to “condon[e] Mom’s behavior” or not – it’s a choice between supporting or not supporting Leah.

That’s instantly clarifying, isn’t it? It works for any future decisions about family events, too. Ask yourself: “How do I best support Leah?” If it’s not obvious to you in any given moment, then you can put it to Leah herself. If she sees this as a responsibi­lity she’s not comfortabl­e bearing, a fair point, then call it by its true name, “How do I best serve my beliefs?”

You can stay close through individual visits. The only reunified family that isn’t a sellout is one that forms in solidarity behind Leah. Not that this is the reason to make the choices you do – but here’s hoping you inspire that result.

Ms. Hax: I have been dating a gentleman for 11⁄2 years. He’s a nice man, in my same profession, divorced and also a single parent.

Since the pandemic he has spent a lot more time with me, and every time I get on a call with a friend, he sulks, often seems upset, and storms off. He’s in his mid-40s so I find this behavior peculiar. He also often gets upset with me when I agree to outdoor, distanced gatherings with a friend who needs to talk; he admonishes me for days about not being cautious.

I am feeling a bit trapped and wanting to run. I have found myself changing who I am and walking on eggshells as a result of his behavior. I have suggested therapy and tried talking to him about it, but he deflects and turns it back on me. He is otherwise lovely, but this is extra stress during an already hard time. – M.

M.: Get out. Respect your impulse to run. It’s a healthy response to danger.

If he were putting you in a cage, then you’d have no doubt he was restrictin­g your freedom. You say you’ve responded to his moody possessive­ness by eggshellwa­lking, which restricts your freedom to

be yourself. Just because it is psychologi­cal doesn’t mean it’s not a cage.

Pandemia teems with mental-health challenges, but don’t lump in possessive­ness, control or blaming. They star on lists of predictors for abuse.

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