Toronto Star

Right words could have given ex- friend food for thought

- Ellie Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@ thestar. ca.

Q: I was friends with the children and the second wife of a prominent philanthro­pist.

Several weeks after his death, I learned that his children had emptied his charity’s account and shipped his art collection for sale overseas.

These adult children then sued to kick out their stepmother from the home where she’s lived with their father for over 25 years.

I took the stepmother’s side, knowing that the father’s will had allotted her rights and privileges in anticipati­on of his children being greedy.

The courts, after a long and brutal legal battle, ruled in favour of the stepmother, who in return gave her stepchildr­en their late mother’s memorabili­a which had been left behind in the house.

Just recently, I encountere­d the stepdaught­er who had once been a close friend of mine, at our mutual friend’s funeral.

I refused to even acknowledg­e her.

Was I being rude? Disgusted

A: I get the negative sentiment you feel toward this person, yet everything you knew about the family background suggests that she and her brother had been raised as spoiled, overindulg­ed kids.

And so their behaviour as adults is no surprise.

The father acknowledg­ed this in his will, by making sure that his second wife would not be left vulnerable to losing what he intended her to have.

Given that you encountere­d this once- close friend at a funeral, you might’ve taken a different approach — for example, in remarking about the obvious: “In the end, there’s only a funeral, and how your character’s described by those who knew you.”

Maybe it would give her pause about how she treats people.

Readers’ commentary: Regarding the lawsuit by the son of a divorced couple to regain money from sale of the family home that initially went to his mother ( Dec. 19):

“As a family business mediator, I thought to add one more element to your excellent advice. When a divorcing couple splits assets, adult children commonly become concerned that their future inheritanc­e will disappear into their parents’ new relationsh­ips.

“One case example: A wealthy woman with two teenage children remarried a man with two adult children. She died before her new husband, leaving it all to him to ‘ manage’ with no direction about how that should be done.

“Ten years later, he passed away suddenly, leaving his old will, which left his children to inherit all of his former wife’s wealth, leaving her children with nothing.

“In your letter- writer’s situation, the mother could begin to build back trust by providing some sense of security that was lost by her children in the divorce.

“The son may be looking for some emotional security that he has a place in her heart, and that she’s thought of her own children’s future.

“A good first step: If the investment­s she made from the sale of assets of her first marriage ( e. g., the house) are somehow secured, at least in part, for her children on her passing ( if there’s anything left).

“Trust comes with a show of commitment and caring, and it’d go a long way to rebuild that trust with some initial assurances.

“I have confidence in families’ ability to reunite on some level. I’ve seen it happen over and over again even after years of pain, but only when there’s effort on both parts. And it does take the parent to make the first move.

“I often ask my clients, who is the parent here?”

Ellie’s tip of the day

How a divorcing couple deals with their house, finances and wills can reassure adult children of the connection to their parents, or divide a family further.

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