The Mercury News

Family secret destroys friendship

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

DEAR AMY >> I’m holding on to a longtime family friend’s secret, and it’s very upsetting.

My friend “Chris” and I grew up together as kids. We always acted as members of each other’s extended family. We are now middle-aged.

Our mothers were friends from kindergart­en on, until each of their untimely deaths, when they were in their 50s.

I was given a huge burden when my parents told me that Chris has a different father than the man who raised him and who he thought was his father. His parents took their secret to the grave.

Does this need to stay a secret, now that his parents are dead? Does he deserve to know? How would he benefit if I told him now?

I stopped our friendship a few years back under the burden of knowing this. I just couldn’t handle it. Should I tell him?

— Holding a Secret

DEAR HOLSING >> First of all, you don’t know if this “secret” is true. It was passed along to you by people who are not available to verify it.

Your situation is a perfect example of how destructiv­e family secrets can be. Your lifelong friend has lost the benefit of your friendship, without knowing why. He might blame himself for your distance.

Yes, I think you should disclose this to him, but through the context of your friendship. You should frame this as a decision that the elder generation made many years ago, that unfortunat­ely engulfed your treasured friendship.

Tell him, “I want to explain why I’ve kept my distance. My parents told this to me, and I realize that

I let it create a wall between us. Now — many years later — my big regret is that I let it happen. I have no idea if this is even true, but I assume you could try to verify it if you wanted to, through DNA testing. Regardless, I hope you will accept my apology for keeping this from you. I feel terrible about my own choice, but I honestly did not know how to handle it.”

DEAR AMY >> I never feel like “family” at family gatherings.

I get teased for being antisocial or too quiet by my louder relatives. I AM quiet and introverte­d, but their teasing doesn’t make me feel welcome or want to open up to them. (It doesn’t help that I am queer and trans, and not comfortabl­e being out to them).

The pandemic has given me an excuse not to attend family events, but the teasing continues!

How do I explain to my extrovert relatives that I don’t enjoy being around them as much as they think I should?

— Shy Anti-socialite

DEAR SHY >> You don’t owe your relatives an explanatio­n on your own temperamen­t. You have the right to exist as your own authentic self, and if you can’t do that in the midst of family gatherings without being mocked and feeling put-down, then you should skip these gatherings, unless you feel strong enough to either tolerate it, or push back.

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