The Columbus Dispatch

Spouse will need to step up to try to end family feuding

- CAROLYN HAX Write to Carolyn Hax — whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com

I am at my wits’ end with family drama. I will spare you the very long and ugly details and start with the most recent heartache.

My husband’s daughter from a previous marriage invited our son and his wife and 2-year-old to spend the weekend with them since they were going to be in town. His wife accepted. My husband has been estranged from this daughter for more than two years. She lives down the street from us.

When my son and his family arrived, they went to lunch with my husband and stayed through the evening with us. Our little granddaugh­ter even went into “her room” and told her dad she wanted to sleep in her bed. It was cruel to see her cry when she had to leave and go to my stepdaught­er’s house.

My husband is furious. His feelings are crushed and he is angry they would subject her to such nonsense. My husband feels they have been disloyal to him by staying with his estranged daughter.

I have expressed to my son how I felt about his staying with his half-sister. Not because of her so much as how wrong it feels to me to not stay with us. After we are dead and gone, he will have time to stay with his half-sister.

My first thought was to leave town before they got here so I could avoid the whole ordeal. Now, my husband and I have hurt feelings, and lost sleep over this.

Heartbreak seems to follow wherever my stepdaught­er is concerned. I don’t want to alienate my daughterin-law because she will cut my granddaugh­ter out of my life. How can I keep the peace and not “betray” my husband in the process?

Your argument, recapped: It’s your stepdaught­er’s fault that she wants to spend time with her brother. Except the part that’s your daughter-in-law’s fault for saying yes.

Maybe you won’t like it in those words, but that’s what you’re saying — and it’s impressive that you’re able to present this without attributin­g any drama to the man who was “crushed” at the “ordeal” of witnessing the “cruel” and “disloyal” “nonsense” of a child “subject[ed] to” ...

I can understand your powerful incentive not to see this; even thinking it opens you to accusation­s of betrayal from your wounded husband, no doubt.

But the longer you remain a spokesbot for your husband and declare with a straight face that your son can’t sleep at his sister’s house until you’re dead, the more soulrebuil­ding you’ll need when you see the view I’ve got from here: that you’ve been devoured by your husband’s narcissist­ic fantasy world.

Even if I’m way off, your family dynamic is still way off. Please find a well-recommende­d family therapist and go. Just you. Unspool those “very long and ugly details.”

— C.

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