Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Mom yearns to share sons’ news with her ex

- Amy Dickinson Submit letters to askamy@ amydickins­on.com or to “Ask Amy” P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068.

Dear Amy: My adult sons are so estranged from my ex-husband that neither invited him to their weddings.

While I still have difficult feelings toward my ex, I try to have some level of civil interactio­n with him.

He asks for updates as to what our sons are up to and how they are doing.

He is their father, and it seems to me he has a right to know at least a bit about what is going on in their lives.

Is it inappropri­ate for me to share general informatio­n, such as buying a house or changing jobs or is that something only they should share?

Since they want no contact with him, without informatio­n from me he would have virtually no knowledge.

While I do hope that at some point my sons’ feelings toward their father will soften, I have never pushed them to have more interactio­ns with him.

Still, it does seem sad to me that he should not be able to have any knowledge of what is going on in their lives.

He rarely tries to contact them, although I know he has in the past.

I don’t pass along anything I would think of as a confidence. But sharing basics doesn’t seem wrong to me. Am I off base? — Unsure

Dear Unsure: You don’t say why your sons want no-contact with their father (and perhaps you don’t know), but this is an issue you should run past your sons.

What might seem like benign “general knowledge” to you might strike them as private and intrusive.

As it is your compassion toward your ex-husband is commendabl­e, but you seem to be placing his desires and “rights” over those of your sons.

You could use this as an attempt to build a rickety bridge between all of these men: “Dad often asks about you; I don’t want to violate your privacy, so I want to make sure it’s OK if I share very general knowledge with him — just to let him know the basics?” — Respect their decisions.

Dear Amy: In a reply to “Stressed in Suburbia,” you suggested that a woman working from home should ask the neighbor children to keep their voices down during her work hours.

Absolutely not, Amy! The neighbor kids with the trampoline aren’t in a space that isn’t theirs; they’re not being destructiv­e or misbehavin­g. They aren’t doing anything except being kids.

Stressed can shut her window and invest in some noise-dampening curtains, but she absolutely may not set boundaries on when and how kids play in their own yards. — Upset

Dear Upset: I didn’t suggest that she ask them not to play, but I do believe that asking them to be aware of how noisy they are is worth a try.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States