Toronto Star

Rise above family’s years of resentment

- ELLIE ELLIE TESHER IS AN ADVICE COLUMNIST FOR THE STAR AND BASED IN TORONTO. SEND YOUR RELATIONSH­IP QUESTIONS VIAEMAIL:ELLIE@THESTAR.CA.

Q Having worked with someone for many years, we became friends. His wife and he had six children. When she became very ill, my co-worker took a leave of absence to be at home with her.

When his wife passed, he returned to work, we remained friends and after two years started dating. After three years, we got married. We loved each other, laughed a lot, travelled. When he got sick, our living room became a hospital room, as he wished. About a year later, he passed. Our only problem had been his children (adults) and still is. They didn’t accept me, and let their father know. He tried his hardest to keep things civil.

Eventually, I gave up on it. I was 15 years my husband’s junior. He had his first child when he was 18, so there wasn’t a great age difference between me and the eldest.

My husband had tried hard for peaceful coexistenc­e. But after a particular­ly awful family wedding, he couldn’t be in the middle any longer and we continued our great life. He still had a (changed) relationsh­ip with them. They were awful to him.

I always expected that when he passed, he’d be buried with his wife of 50-plus years, his children’s mother. I had no problem with that, despite being married 18 years. The week he passed he told me he wanted to be buried with me. I was shocked. He knew it’d cause trouble but that’s what he wanted. He said it could be resolved by dividing the ashes.

He passed at home, with just me. Then hell broke loose. His children wanted to see the will, and wanted him buried with their mother. They weren’t named in the will, but I gave them copies and agreed to divide his ashes. I planned a farewell that included his children and grandchild­ren in readings.

His children stayed outside until it was time to start. My husband had two brothers whom we’d visited and attended their funerals. None of the children of the second brother attended my husband’s funeral.

Now my stepson has passed away. I should attend the upcoming memorial but I don’t want to go to the cemetery where half my husband’s ashes are, plus his first wife, his daughter and his grandson.

Rightfully, the family will be honouring their brother, but their parents will be part of it. Three out-of-town sisters aren’t attending.

I don’t know what to do. The son of this stepson has been very good to me. I want to support him, but I think it’d be less stressful for him if I’m not there. He’s already worried about me and what might be directed at me. As am I.

Except for a couple of grandchild­ren I really want nothing to do with this family. But I want to be supportive

Stand tall and be bigger than those who behaved small and meanspirit­ed. Your late husband would expect that from you

to the grandson who’s so kind to me. My husband was such a good, kind man I don’t know why his children made his life so hard.

He Deserved Better

A Stand tall and be bigger than those who behaved small and mean-spirited. Your late husband would expect that from you.

You two had a wonderfull­y loving relationsh­ip despite his mean-spirited relatives. That’s the triumph of true and committed love that none of them can take away from you, and that they’re incapable of understand­ing.

Ellie’s tip of the day

Hell hath no fury like the cold meanness of adult children who interfere with their parent’s love and generosity to someone important to their life. Worse, some insist on checking the parent’s will to their beloved spouse.

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