The Korea Times

Man’s effort to contact his newfound family is ignored

- By Abigail Van Buren

DEAR ABBY: I recently found out who my biological father is/ was. Apparently, my mother and this man had an affair more than 50 years ago. What bothers me is, I have always lived no more than 15 miles from this man and his family. I tried reaching out to the one half-sibling I am most knowledgea­ble about. They have made no attempt to contact me about this elephant in the room. I don’t know if it’s embarrassm­ent on their part.

I am a respectabl­e man with a great family. Why someone would not want to reach out and at least get to know a brother they supposedly never knew existed is beyond me. We’ve wasted way too many years kept in the dark about this well-kept secret. My thought is that you can never have too big a family — even if we are only half-siblings. Should I continue attempting to reach them, or just sweep all of this under the rug? — EXPANDING THE FAMILY IN OHIO

DEAR EXPANDING: Not everyone is as open-hearted as you. After half a century, your birth father’s family may prefer not to open this chapter of their father’s life. Because you have already reached out to them without getting a response, I don’t think you should push the issue. You wrote that you are a respectabl­e man with a great family. Count your blessings, because not everyone is so fortunate.

DEAR ABBY: I am a 42-yearold man who lives at home with my parents after getting out of an abusive relationsh­ip. A full night’s sleep is important to me and waking up early from avoidable noises is upsetting because I am unable to go back to sleep. My mother’s cellphone is what’s waking me up.

I have asked her numerous times to turn off the ringer at night. She has no reason to be a go-to for emergencie­s, yet she acts as if she is. The last time I asked, she actually told me the phone calls she missed are more important than my sleep.

They are getting old, and I have come to the conclusion I will be here taking care of my parents in the coming years.

I have told Mom numerous times to have her hearing checked, too, to no avail. On numerous occasions I have been sitting upstairs and heard Dad ask her a question in the living room, and Mom, who is sitting right next to him, says, “What?” She’s in denial about her hearing.

I would rather not move out, but I am about ready to do it for peace and quiet. Any words of wisdom for me? — INJURED EARS IN ILLINOIS

DEAR INJURED EARS: Yes, I do. Ask your mother to put her phone on vibrate at bedtime or use its do-not-disturb feature between certain hours. If she refuses, then purchasing a white noise machine might be a solution.

Suggest to your father that he inform their doctor about your mother’s hearing problems. Perhaps if the doctor tells her it’s time to have her hearing checked by an audiologis­t, she won’t tune out the message.

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