The Oklahoman

Mom’s peaceful death leads to sibling war

- Jeanne Phillips www.DearAbby.com

DEAR ABBY: My mom recently passed away at 91. She had a great life and went peacefully at home in bed during the night. I took charge of her medical care and finances after Dad died 10 years ago.

After Mom’s funeral, my brother insisted he would move into her house while he remodeled it, which could tie up the house for a year. It made no sense to me. I am Mom’s executor, and I felt it was unfair to me and my other brother. When I said no, he got really angry, accused me of many mean, untrue things and announced that he disowned me.

The pain of losing my mom AND my brother has been awful. Now I’m working to sell the house, and he interferes and is mean every step of the way. I don’t respond to anything negative he writes. Have you some advice on how to repair our relationsh­ip?

— Double Loss in California

DEAR DOUBLE LOSS: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your mother. If it’s any comfort, estate problems like you’re experienci­ng aren’t all that unusual. Not knowing your brother or the degree to which he is self-centered, I’m having trouble understand­ing his overreacti­on. Was he desperate for a place to stay for a year?

I wish you had mentioned what your other brother thinks about this regrettabl­e situation and whether he, too, was disowned. If he and your angry sibling are on speaking terms, perhaps he can help to mend fences. And hold a good thought. Sometimes time heals these kinds of wounds, once grief lessens and people regain their perspectiv­e.

DEAR ABBY: “Addicted in Kansas City” (Aug. 24) asked you for secular alternativ­es to Alcoholics Anonymous. There are parts of your response that I feel need clarificat­ion.

First of all, AA doesn’t require lifetime attendance at meetings. AA doesn’t “require” anything. (The third tradition states the only requiremen­t for membership is a desire to stop drinking.) Regular attendance at meetings is encouraged but certainly not a requiremen­t.

The other point is tougher — and perhaps more subtle. AA encourages individual­s trying to get sober to find a “God of their own understand­ing,” a Higher Power, SOMETHING bigger than themselves. Many agnostics and atheists get and stay sober in AA.

AA is a spiritual program, not a religious one.

— Sober and Happy in Atlanta DEAR SOBER: Thank you for writing to clarify this. However, there are different programs (different strokes for different folks), which is why I also encourage anyone trying to achieve sobriety to research and explore the alternativ­es. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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