Montreal Gazette

Helping shunned cousin may cause family feud

- Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar

Dear Annie: I come from an extended family that is mostly successful. However, one of my cousins was born mentally and physically disabled, and the family story is that her parents have incompatib­le blood types. However, they had another child 10 years later, even though they claim the doctor told them not to, and this child was born completely normal.

A few years ago, my mother disclosed that the cousin was really born with fetal alcohol syndrome. (My aunt drank heavily during that pregnancy.) However, whenever anyone broaches the subject, that person is verbally attacked by the entire family and written off as evil.

What bothers me is that my aunt has always shunned her first child while doting on the younger one. During family functions, my older cousin is mostly ignored. I feel I’m the only one who has real conversati­ons with her and cares what she has to say. I am considerin­g writing my cousin a letter to say that I know the truth and am so sorry she has been robbed of a normal life. The only problem is if she shares my letter with the rest of the family. How do I help my cousin and bring the truth to light without causing World War III?

At a Standstill Dear Standstill: You don’t need to expose your cousin’s condition to the rest of the family. They already know. Forcing it into the light will not help and may ostracize you, preventing you from being a source of support. Please keep listening and talking with your cousin, making her feel valued. Also contact an organizati­on such as the Fetal Alcohol Disorders Society (faslink.org/) which may offer resources that can help your cousin and also provide informatio­n for you in dealing with this. Dear Annie: My husband and I travel via RV six months out of the year. I often strike up conversati­ons with strangers. My husband, who never initiates conversati­ons with anyone, will then butt in and take over. He rambles on and on, always talking about what he’s done or where he’s been. He won’t let the rest of us get in another word. How can I make him stop?

Jane in an RV Dear Jane: There are myriad reasons why people interrupt and take over conversati­ons: insecurity (the need to impress others), hearing loss (if he doesn’t let anyone else speak, he doesn’t have to respond to things he cannot hear), narcissism (no one else could possibly be more interestin­g than he is), control (you shouldn’t be making friends on your own), or simply cluelessne­ss and anxiety. Talk to your husband, tell him how annoying and intrusive his behaviour is, and explore the possibilit­ies. He may not even realize he is monopolizi­ng the conversati­on, so perhaps you could work on a signal to let him know when he needs to stop talking. He surely will not want others to find him boorish.

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