The Peterborough Examiner

Money hungry children

- DEAR ELLIE ellieadvic­e.com

Q. We were generous financiall­y, equally, to our three children, for weddings, down payments and gifts.

After we lost our business, we suffered years of financial difficulti­es and health issues. One daughter and son-in-law stepped in to assist.

Our other children said, “We’re busy ... hire help; we don’t lend money to family.” We kept quiet to keep the peace.

Recently we received a small inheritanc­e. We treated our daughter and son-in-law to a long weekend in a nearby city.

When our other children learned about the trip, they yelled at us for being unfair, insisting they also deserve trips and threatenin­g that unless we give them equal value in money, they’ll never visit us again.

We cannot let them continue bullying us. What do we do?

A. Respond firmly and finally.

Example: “You denied us help when we needed it. Your sister and brother-in-law spent far more than that trip cost to provide that help.”

I’m usually all for family harmony. But these are selfish and uncaring adults. They’ve shown that their only interest in you as parents is in any money you may have, no matter how little.

If there are grandchild­ren involved, add this sentence: “The example you’d set by not visiting us, will teach your children to be just like you when you need help one day … by turning away.”

Sadly, it’s obvious that if you don’t take this stand, they’ll be even less caring if you need help when older, looking only toward what they might inherit.

Deadly cat allergy

Q. I have a severe cat allergy, which doesn’t respond to allergy medication. If I’m in a room with a cat, I get severe asthma, and, eventually, anaphylaxi­s.

I also cannot go anywhere a cat has been, unless the room has been cat-free for at least one or two months (verified by my family doctor and allergist through testing).

My husband’s adult sister has a pet cat, which she occasional­ly brings to my inlaws’ house for cat-sitting. She also brings the cat to the family cottage.

My husband has repeatedly asked her not to do either (she got upset with him) and also asked his parents to ask her, too. He’s even offered to go to his sister’s home to cat-sit.

However, his sister insists that she’ll continue, and my in-laws say they like having the cat over. Both parents are skeptical about my cat allergy, and always ask why I won’t go to the family cottage.

We’d love to go to the cottage and my inlaws’ house. I’m angry with them for their insensitiv­e behaviour. Neither they nor my sister-in-law will “sacrifice” anything for my needs.

My husband has forwarded them online medical informatio­n on cat allergies. I’ve stayed out of the fray, as he’s taken up this fight. I’m not even sure that telling them all off would be helpful.

A. Tell them off. You have nothing to lose. Currently, you can’t visit them or enjoy the cottage. If your sister-in-law’s clothing carries whatever’s dangerous for you from the cat’s constant presence, and if her parents have been near the cat, it’s also too risky for you to have them at your place.

Your husband should speak up plainly: They’re choosing the cat over his wife … and therefore him, too.

Penniless relationsh­ip

Feedback: Regarding the divorced man who’s terrified that the next woman will again deplete his finances (July 14):

“I’m a woman who agrees with him.

“I’ve known many women who’ve “taken (a guy) to the cleaners” after divorcing, usually with no children involved.

“I know many women who own homes, not from their own finances, but by divorce or common-law breakups.

“One ex-friend is waiting to divorce her third husband, after his father dies beforehand so she can get that inheritanc­e.

“I can understand why this letter-writer is leery of marriage or cohabitati­on with a woman. But so many men are just plain stupid in the face of divorce. So give this man some credit for knowing the score.”

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