The Columbus Dispatch

Refusal of sister to speak to siblings fuels squabble

- — Will Do What’s Right for Her CAROLYN HAX your Write to Carolyn Hax — whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com.

My wife is a wonderfull­y sensible person and appropriat­ely sensitive. She is the eldest of three sisters and often feels left out. The age and geographic­al distance make it understand­able that her two sisters have a much closer relationsh­ip.

Still, they left her out of a big announceme­nt, and my wife is hurt and now doesn’t want to have anything to do with them. She hasn’t answered their phone calls for weeks, and they are calling me asking if she is OK. I’m not allowed to tell the truth.

Her perception­s are entirely correct, but I have told her this isn’t going to produce a good result. I value her family, but I am not the one to suffer the real consequenc­es. I am worried she is making a mistake.

Is there anything I can do but tell her my concerns? And is she right to do this?

What is “wonderfull­y sensible” about giving her sisters the silent treatment, and silencing you as well?

It’s both needlessly punitive and a power trip.

The issue here isn’t the “real consequenc­es” your wife may suffer, or whether she has somehow miscalcula­ted which response will be best for her emotionall­y, either in the near- or long-term. You may be right that she will ultimately regret estranging herself from her sisters, but that is a matter of mistreatin­g herself, and therefore a risk she is entitled to take.

The issue is that your wife’s silence constitute­s mistreatme­nt of others. It’s arbitrary and cruel.

Her sisters may well have done something wrong — I’ll assume you’re right for the sake of argument — but their being wrong doesn’t give your wife license to leave them calling, wondering, grasping for answers.

She recognizes that their wanting answers is leverage she has over them, and she’s using it to cause them pain. How is torturing them defensible?

And how is it possibly OK for her to insist on

complicity? If you told the sisters the truth, then you would also take away your wife’s leverage, so she’s controllin­g you to ensure she can still control her siblings.

Please do not let yourself be a party to emotional abuse.

There’s a much simpler issue here, too: Grown-ups use their words. The mature option for your wife is to face her problem directly and speak to her sisters: “I was really hurt when you excluded me from this announceme­nt. I feel left out on a regular basis, but this hurt the most.”

Ideally — as in, maturely — she would then let them say their piece and maybe reconcile if warranted, but she can also say, if she so chooses: “I don’t like feeling this way and I don’t see anything about our relationsh­ips changing, so I will not be in touch for a while. Please don’t try to contact me.”

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