The Mercury News

Rift flares up after baby’s birth

- Contact Amy Dickinson via email at askamy@ tribpub.com.

DEAR AMY >> My only brother and I have always had a difficult relationsh­ip. About two years ago, we stopped talking completely.

When my husband and I found out that we were expecting our first child, I reached out to my brother to share the news. He was overjoyed, and we had a long conversati­on in which he apologized for his past behavior and told me he wanted to be a large part of his niece’s life.

I delivered about two months early, and our daughter stayed in the NICU for almost a month and a half. My brother (who has never made a lot of money) generously gifted my daughter a beautiful set of linens for her crib.

In our month-and-a-half stay in the hospital with our critically ill daughter, we did not get around to sending out thank-you notes. When my brother visited the hospital, though, we thanked him profusely.

A week after we returned home from the hospital, my brother sent me an angry email claiming that we were unapprecia­tive of his efforts to be a part of our daughter’s life. As a result, he has refused to speak with me and is emailing my husband for updates on the child.

When I asked him what prompted these feelings, he said that we had never sent him a thank-you note for his gifts.

Was I insensitiv­e to his efforts? My husband wants to try to make this right, because my brother is our daughter’s only uncle. I do not think that this is a good idea, as my brother has proven to be unreasonab­le. How should I go about handling this? — New Mom

DEAR MOM >> It seems that your daughter’s birth has not brought on a magical change in your lifelong dynamic with your brother. And so, you’ll have to do what most of us in challengin­g families do — take this relationsh­ip one day and one episode at a time, and react proportion­ally. This is something your brother, unfortunat­ely, seems unable (or unwilling) to do.

Your brother is going to have to figure out that if he really wants to have a relationsh­ip with his niece, he is going to have to make nice with the child’s mother.

Your husband should respond to him clearly: “We’d love to keep in touch, but in order to be a friend to our family, you will have to be a friend to

all of us. You need to communicat­e with your sister.”

Cutting you out of the loop is not the path to reconcilia­tion. Otherwise the dynamic is only one of manipulati­on and capitulati­on.

DEAR AMY >> Thank you, thank you, for helping me to start my day with a laugh! In your response to “Aussie,” an idiotic architect, you managed to work in a reference to Art Vandelay. This Seinfeld reference tickled me to no end. — Big Fan

DEAR FAN >> Thank you. I’ll be here all week.

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Ask Amy Amy Dickinson

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