San Francisco Chronicle

Transgende­r in-law leads to family disagreeme­nts

- By Jeanne Phillips

Dear Abby: Our daughter, “Joan,” and her husband, “Frank,” have been married 19 years. Their only child will be 4 next month. A year and a half ago, Frank came out as a transgende­r female. Joan is handling this exceptiona­lly well. Our son, “Alex,” is not. Our family will never have the traditiona­l holidays again because Alex doesn’t want his daughters, ages 13 and 10, around Frank. We are heartbroke­n, worried for our children and confused about how to handle this new family dynamic. Joan plans on remaining in her marriage. Frank is legally changing his name to “Anissa,” taking hormones and excited to live her “real life.” In the meantime, we feel like outsiders looking in. These individual­s, all in their 40s, are able to do what they want with their lives — yet they’re our children. The thought of never having our family all together in our home again is upsetting. How do you suggest we cope? Out of Sorts in Washington

Dear Out of Sorts: Cope by taking it day by day and making adjustment­s as necessary. You are not on the outside looking in. You are full-fledged participan­ts in this scenario. Your new daughter-in-law is the same person she has always been. She’s not a danger to anyone’s daughters. If your son can’t accept that, there is nothing you can do about it. Let him know he is always welcome — as is Anissa — at family celebratio­ns. If he can’t bring himself to attend, see him and the girls separately. If I have learned one thing in my lifetime, it is to take each day as it comes and make the most of it.

Dear Abby: Our neighbor has been hospitaliz­ed for six months because of a serious accident that left him paralyzed. His wife has been staying in the city near the hospital so she can be with him. My husband and I have been keeping an eye on their house and, at their request, moving their truck in the driveway so it appears someone is home. The husband returned home a few weeks ago. We received a thankyou card from his wife. Inside was $50 in gift cards. We appreciate the thought but, we helped them out with no expectatio­n of anything in return. How do we go about returning them without offending our neighbors? Good Deed Neighbors

Dear Neighbors: I don’t think you should return them. To not accept them in the spirit in which they were given would be doing the couple a disservice. Sometimes the burden of gratitude weighs heavy. This is your neighbors’ way of showing you how much your efforts meant to them, so accept the gesture graciously.

Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or www.dearabby.com.

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