The Capital

Funeral mix-up creates break in the family

- By Amy Dickinson Twitter @askingamy Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson

Dear Amy: My father passed away recently, and I was responsibl­e for planning the funeral, during COVID-19.

In order to minimize everyone’s risk, we chose to hold a church service and a graveside service.

Due to a mix-up with the time for the graveside service, several people who did not feel comfortabl­e going into the church — including our adult child — missed the graveside service.

Our adult child is blaming us and will not return calls, emails, texts, etc.

I’m at a loss about what to do. I am grieving my father and also the loss of a relationsh­ip with our adult child and their family.

We just want to have communicat­ion, and to be allowed to see our preteen grandchild­ren and our adult child. Please help.

— Grieving

Dear Grieving: If there are things you wish you had done differentl­y regarding the arrangemen­ts you made, you should take responsibi­lity, apologize, and affirm your child’s disappoint­ment and hurt over this mix-up.

You should also do some personal searching to see if there are additional incidents, episodes, or slings and arrows that might be beneath the surface.

After you do your own personal inventory, you may conclude that your adult child’s current behavior is extreme and disproport­ionate.

That’s when you should soften. They must work through their own feelings. Punishing you does not help them, but they don’t seem to know that, yet.

Assume that you do not know the half of what your child has been experienci­ng during this pandemic year (nor do they know or understand the enormity of what you’ve been through). Make sure they know that you are willing to communicat­e about this. And then let it lie. Don’t give up on this relationsh­ip but do be very patient.

Dear Amy: I have a wonderful hairdresse­r that I love, but I am considerin­g leaving as her client, due to very loud derision by other stylists and their clients over mask-wearing during a recent visit.

My hairdresse­r and I were both furious listening to the rampant misinforma­tion they were loudly sharing with one another.

I can bite my tongue and fume, wear earplugs or go elsewhere. My fear is that complainin­g to the owner will be futile.

My instincts are to use a soft voice and politely request for them to respectful­ly take it down a notch.

I don’t want to get into a shouting match. Your thoughts?

— Hairy Situation

Dear Hairy: Hair salons tend to be hybrid public/ private businesses, with independen­t contractor­s paying rent from the owner and seating clients in chairs lined up next to one another, in an open environmen­t. Even though you are there only to see your hair stylist, there is no real expectatio­n of privacy.

Why should you leave, wear earplugs, or keep silent and fume?

Whenever people are loudly declaiming, no matter the topic, you have every right to ask them, “Would you mind taking it down a notch?”

You also have the right to dive in and respectful­ly disagree, and see where this takes everyone.

Definitely speak to the salon owner about this. The owner should also pass along customer complaints that affect the overall environmen­t in the salon. Understand that if you leave the practice, the loss will be felt most acutely by your own hairstylis­t, and the loss of your business will not affect the neighborin­g stylist at all.

Dear Amy: I know you promote ways to help keep families connected.

As the last of the previous generation passed away, and with COVID19 keeping us distant, I thought it would be a good idea to just remind our family members who we all are. So, on the first of each month, I send out an email to all 43 of us just listing that month’s birthday celebrants. No big news or message, and no obligation — just a list.

With marriages and new babies, the list keeps growing. I used to wonder if anyone read the list. I noticed when I got a date wrong or left someone off, I heard from them right away!

— The Old Uncle

Dear Uncle: I love this, as long as you respect the wishes of any family members who don’t want to be included.

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