Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Husband furious at not being told of daughter’s marriage

- Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, DC 20071; or email tellme@washpost.com CAROLYN HAX

DEAR CAROLYN: My daughter was secretly married over a year ago. She informed me afterward, then told me not to tell my husband, her father, because of incidents where he shared private informatio­n with others.

I told our daughter three times that I’m not comfortabl­e keeping this secret from her father. She said she isn’t either, but it needs to be that way for now.

Finally, she told my husband and told him I already knew. He is extremely angry with me and says I have damaged our relationsh­ip. What should I have done?

— Caught in the Middle

DEAR READER: Your daughter dumped only bad options in your lap. You either lied to your husband or betrayed your daughter. Ugh.

You asked about “should,” so: When that happens, it’s best to stand firm that she’s asking too much of you. Say you love her and respect her right to decide for herself what is best for her relationsh­ip with her dad — however, attaching secrecy strings to her news crosses a line into your relationsh­ip with her dad. And that’s not fair.

Fair would be to withhold from you both or tell you both. No parent-splitting.

When it’s obviously too late for that, you’ve heard the news, the next step is to say you won’t keep a secret indefinite­ly. That grants her some time to organize herself, then tell her dad. This is along the lines of what you did, and it’s defensible, though a year is pushing it.

If we’re talking strictly about marriage health, then it would be your responsibi­lity to say you won’t keep secrets from your husband. The person with the secret could tell him herself today, or by this time next week, or some other clear, tight interval — but after that, you’re telling. Reasonable choices.

But I believe this secret, in this family, is more complicate­d, and not just because you’re being asked to choose between child and spouse. There’s also obvious dysfunctio­n involved when a daughter doesn’t trust a parent to know she got married.

Whether the underlying problem is entirely with her or entirely with her dad, or some combinatio­n of the two (plus you?), is something I can’t possibly tell from here. But whatever the backstory is, that plainly informed your choice.

I put myself in your husband’s position, and I hope — my goodness, I hope — that my first reaction would be to look inward, to ask myself why my grown daughter felt she couldn’t tell me she got married.

And I’d be asking myself, I hope, what I can do to build healthier relationsh­ips. I hope I’d be asking you how we ended up in this awful place, and what I did specifical­ly to get us here.

I really, really hope I’d do all these things before I tore into you — and then still not tear into you, because adults disagree civilly instead. As awful as I’d feel, mentally rewinding through this yearlong lie of omission, it would still be my responsibi­lity to ask what led you to decide this was your best option. I could disagree with your reasoning, vehemently even, but not before I made a real effort to understand what it actually was.

This is, as you requested, all under the heading of what you “should” have done. So it’s well worth thinking about, but also moot unless your daughter hides a marriage again.

To move forward now: Ask yourself how your family got here. Inventory the grievances, imagined and real. Then have the courage to take your stands accordingl­y.

Dysfunctio­n this deep points to therapy. See how old grudges look to fresh eyes.

 ?? ?? (Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)
(Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)
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