Santa Fe New Mexican

A grandma shut out by her family

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Dear Annie: I am a 68-year-old widow with two grown children, both married, both living nearby. I dearly love babies and baby-sit as much as possible. My son and wife had my first grandson over the summer. My son called me the morning after to invite me to see him, so I did for a few minutes. Then, a few weeks later and a few weeks after that, my son invited me to their home to see the baby again. So I went. When I didn’t see the baby for several weeks, I texted my daughter-in-law to ask whether I could see the baby but got no response. I knew she would be going back to work soon, so I asked again. No response. The next thing I knew, my son told me to leave them alone — that they wanted their privacy. I cried and cried but don’t know what happened. He told me to not text or call.

This happened around Thanksgivi­ng, when, for the first time ever, we didn’t spend the holiday together. Tonight I texted him and asked him to pick up three gifts my friends sent. He was so ticked off that I wasn’t giving them the “space” they need that I think I will either mail him the gifts before the baby outgrows them or return them to my friends.

He is upset that I have some mild memory problems, mainly repeating myself and not realizing it. I have been to a doctor for this and am taking medication for it. My friends say the medication seems to be helping. I think this problem could also apply to my not realizing I had previously texted him the same thing.

What can I do about my son and wife? Everybody I know seems to really love me. I had many invitation­s to Thanksgivi­ng dinner and Christmas get-togethers. I am so sad! I have wanted a grandchild for years. — New Grandma

Dear New Grandma: I’d encourage you to get a second opinion on your memory problems. (And no, your friends’ opinions don’t count.) Investigat­e the issue from every angle, because it sounds pretty serious from what you’ve described — not rememberin­g recent conversati­ons you’ve had or text messages you’ve sent. Ask your son to accompany you to a doctor’s visit so your physician can explain the situation to him. If your son understand­s that this is a medical condition and outside your control, he should be more sympatheti­c when you repeat yourself or are confused. It will be impossible to help take care of your grandkids if you’re not first and foremost taking care of yourself.

Dear Annie: This is in response to “Weird, Stupid or Selfish?” — who keeps having to hide decorative candy from her husband because he eats it. I had the same problem with my husband. Our three fun-loving teenage daughters decided to put some doggy candy in a beautiful crystal dish. Needless to say, it was irresistib­le to their father. It tasted so bad he had to try two! That sure slowed down the emptying of the candy dishes. — Carol

Dear Carol: Now why didn’t I think of that? Please tell your daughters that they take first place at creative problem-solving this week. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators. com. To find out more about Annie Lane and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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