Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Angry at brother’s wife over funeral

- CAROLYN HAX TELL ME ABOUT IT ▶ tellmewash­post.com

DEAR CAROLYN: Our family has always been very tight-knit. This has been tested in recent years, following my brother’s marriage to a woman we believe has intentiona­lly created rifts between us.

Our last living grandparen­t passed away after a lengthy illness. Even though we knew it was coming, it was a huge blow to our entire extended family, as she was truly our rock. She was always kind and welcoming to my sister-in-law, of course.

For the funeral, my sister and I packed up our families and spent the weekend planning the service and reminiscin­g with family members. My brother was the only grandchild not present.

He came the day of the funeral. His wife and three young children were not with him, and we overheard him giving various excuses for their absence ("We have so much going on"). Their absence was very conspicuou­s.

After the service, our brother apparently got a call from his wife — I wasn’t there — berating him for losing track of time and not leaving earlier, to pick up their child from sports practice. He high-tailed it out of there.

We’re all hurt and confused. My sister-in-law apparently texted my parents to express her condolence­s. Several cousins and friends asked why they weren’t there, and we had no explanatio­n. It felt like a slap in the face. I’m fuming.

Is there any way I can express to her how disappoint­ed, hurt and angry we were (or at least, I was) by her seeming callousnes­s toward my grandmothe­r, who welcomed her with open arms? Is this appropriat­e? My therapist suggested years ago that my sister-in-law may be a narcissist. Does constructi­ve criticism get through to people like that?

— Grieving and [Ticked] Off DEAR GRIEVING AND [TICKED] OFF: What would be constructi­ve about the criticism you plan? Your pain is understand­able and I am sorry for your loss. I can’t know what you’re feeling, but I have my own experience with losing the emotional center of my extended family. Grief is disorienti­ng.

But it doesn’t give you say in things that aren’t your business — and how your brother conducts his marriage is none of your business. Full stop.

You don’t know what goes on between them. You don’t know what role your brother had in decisions about this weekend. A family with three littles (+ pandemic!) could have a dozen reasons to opt out. You don’t know how your grandmothe­r’s relationsh­ip with your brother or sister-in-law worked, either.

You also don’t know how your "very tight-knit" ways greet newcomers. It’s clear you took exception to your brother’s wife early; did the trouble start with her behavior toward all of you, or all of your behavior toward her? We could spend pages on chickens and eggs.

So I’ll offer two pieces of advice I hope will make the hard work of your grief a little easier.

First, set the bone of your brother and sister-in-law and their marriage and their priorities and her funeral absence and her maybe-kinda-possible secondhand-hunch diagnosis down. Open jaws, drop bone. Completely. Walk away. Keep loving your brother, of course, and welcome him any and every time he shows up, and extend the same welcome to his wife and children as the right thing to do, but walk away from thinking you can fix his family.

Second piece of advice, recognize your attendance-outrage as the tempting distractio­n it is. You have big, heavy feelings from your loss — and no one to blame but the universe. To be part of an in-crowd scandalize­d!!! by a disliked outsider’s behavior is a form of relief and release. Her, you can blame.

But remaining respectful­ly warm and welcoming to your brother and his family is important. If his wife is controllin­g and he needs your help someday, then this is how to remain connected. If he’s just fine and living life and attending funerals on his terms that are his business, this is how to remain connected.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States